Cape Kuyuyukak is actually on geonames: https://www.geonames.org/5866971/cape-kuyuyukak.html position 56.89744, -156.828
It was a little (few hundred meters) off place but was definitely there, maybe a typo while searching... it wouldn't surprise me, these Alaskan names can be pretty weird.
While editing Thetis, i've come across an awesome report of reindeer operations which has helped a lot. In that report, along the many other info there is a chapter on "The Eskimo of St. Lawrence Island", with a section on numerals which is just awesome (it's page 219 in the report). Shortly here's their numerals, transliterated in 1899, probably today they'd be written differently, yet definitely tongue twisters
And the remark before that is just awesome:One — Atassik.
Two — Mal(g)ho.
Three — Pinglyoot.
F our — Stammet.
Five — Tathsleemet.
Six — Achovindluk.
Seven — Maharachovindluk.
Eight — Pinglyoonungingloluk.
Nine — Stammenungingloluk.
Ten — Kohla.
Eleven — Kolam atassik seepnukloga.
Twelve — Kolam mal(g)hok seepnuklokuk.
Thirteen — Kolam pingiyoot seepnukloga.
Fourteen — Kolam stammet seepnukloga.
Fifteen — Akamiak seepnukloga
Sixteen — Kolam achovindluk.
Seventeen — Kolam maharachovindluk seepnukloga.
Twenty — Yuweena.
Twenty-one — Yuweenam atassik seepnukloga
Thirty — Yuweenam kolam seepnukloga.
Forty — Yuwokomal (g) hok.
Added both Cape Kuyuyukak and Ashiiak Island to the db. Thanks!There are words for counting numbers as high as 400, but there are probably few of the people who ever count higher than 100.