44.

-    umts  #t  ttl hy7      while the 8.elt Sait iw-aitaats e        in demti-
frod it the    Iat    Ot   L-.iek 1a1d (Petret, Is4, Iap a).
he Nmm Ot the Aglemuto tribe ba    appaed in Variove tero.
k   ek et Meriea Indiaes (Rdt 30) give Aebuwjutem,
.Agle    tes, AglaimLutee, Aglomiut, Aploeutos, Agulmmtemo Under
Og1eotes ball reports
hie tribe inhbi    the north *east of Aliaska
/Alaska ?eme~vl/     M   the 169th #goeo of woest
1,0 tutl e to the hed .f Brietol Bay, and *cig the
shore of that Bay to Point Itelin.   T ler habits
a"e oetially the a     sseas these of the lsstumentiened
tribe /3.aiapiut/, while their voeabular7 diffes semo-
what tie that of the latter. They live principally by
fishing and hunting the walrus, seal, door, and foxes;
th*y are fer in nunbor. They are the Aglomut of
Helmborg (1077v, p. 405).
H.W . Bancreft speaks of them as Aglegautos, a nation belonging to the
'KonLagan' linguistic fatlly (1675, vol. 1, p. 70). Hrdlieka (1926,
p. 235) has both Oglemut and Aglepiute. Por eonvenelonoe, so will us
Petrof's 'Aglemute'; of them he says 'This tribo, nunberlng but a few
hundrods, Inhabits the north coast of Allaska peninsula, down to the
0ogashik river, where the Aleutian settlements begLn' (1884, p. 136).
Coerning the physical features and ecology of the Bristol Bay
region Potrof writes
Tho country between Bering Se and the alpine chain
of-mountains extending along the eastern shore is a gradually
aseending plane, dotted with lakes fed from the glacoers
end otenal snows In the east,.and having their outlets
In the west. In the northern portion of the peninsula a
bolt of timber roaches down In the center be the vicinity
of Lake Bochorof, but beyond this the forest disappears,
and only the deep ravines exhibit a stunted growth ot
eeoping wi-llew and alder brush. The reindeer broees
and herds all ever this region, retretng d uring the sinmer
up to their ineossiblo retrets amongs the snowy peaks
of the mountain range, where they are o.tM seen by the
trveler below as a moving line of black dots winding
areund the saits. Durng the autunn and winter they