Carl Linnaeus, The Lapland Journey, translated by Peter Graves (Edinburgh: Lockharton Press, 1995), p. 120.
The Mountains [1], 10/07/1732, ¶628:
When my serving man came in, he placed his nose against the nose of the person he was going to greet as though he were going to kiss him, and uttered the word “Purist”, the old term of greeting. I asked whether he had kissed him. He replied that he had not, but merely placed his nose against him, and even that gesture only extended as far as kinsmen.