Hut-tát-ch'l. Site of Indian village on S. E. end of Orcas island.

Ko-pé-tun. S. E. point of eastern bay in Orcas island.

Mūk-kwūl-nitch. Small lake and cascade emptying into the eastern bay.

I-ukh´kan. The cove at Mūk-kwūl-nitch.

Chin-chin-tsé-lūng. A rock on the eastern shore of the bay. It was another demon—a woman who committed adultery with every one. She was turned into stone by Ha-áls, but her spirit remains. She used to live at that place in summer, but went up the bay in the winter.

Nūkh-whái-yūm. Deadman's rock in the eastern bay. An old cemetery of the Lummi Indians.

Tsul-whé-sun. A site at the head of the bay.

Swá-lakh. Mount Constitution, on Orcas island. The name is also given to the eastern bay itself, or rather to the country upon it.

S'ko-ma-ang. A mountain on the peninsula between the eastern and middle bays. The name refers to a berry called t'kwa´ma, and means "like that berry."

A´la-la, "like a house," from a´lung, "a house." Another hill on Orcas island. The name also applies to the land bordering on the middle bay.