152 



EASTER ISLAND. 



is clearly under the dominance of freedom of intercommunication. 

 These results are still too composite to disclose the details of the real 

 story of folk movement. We have already segregated the material as 



Table 30. 



1 Southeast 

 Polynesia. 



Pau-Mgv-Mq-Ta 



Pau-Mgv-Mq 



Pau-Mgv-Ta. . . . 



Pau-Mq-Ta 



Pau-Mgv 



Pau-Mq 



Pau-Ta 



Pau 



Total 



Mgv-Mq-Ta 



Mgv-Mq 



Mgv-Ta 



Mgv 



Total 



Ta-Mq 



Ta-Mq-Ha 



Ta-Ha 



Ta 



Total 



Mq 



Mq-Ha 



Total 



Grand total.. 



! 1 



4 

 21 



32 



23 



18 



379 

 o 



488 



Poly- 

 nesian. 



40 

 8 



5 

 18 



4 



1 



25 

 5 



116 



42 



207 



76 



73 



398 



85 



23 



105 



o 



213 



o 



133 



133 



1232 



73 

 20 

 26 

 24 



Proto- 

 Samoan. 



8 



2 



7 

 10 



4 

 "4 

 '4 



4 



63 



Tongafiti. 



47 

 4 



25 

 29 



13 



7 



58 



30 



Total. 



213 



34 



31 



'4 

 54 



143 



34 

 o 

 o 



27 



61 



12 

 O 



'33 



30 



o 

 o 



65 



42 

 32 

 29 

 51 



154 



'7 

 o 

 o 



90 



106 



18 



68 

 89 



44 



40 



476 



39 



880 



191 

 290 



"45 

 202 



828 



1 66 



23 

 105 



182 



95 



69 

 23 



12 



332 



92 



383 



107 



7' 

 O 



476 



152 

 I56 



7' 



308 



545 



2492 



it has been identified in the Proto-Samoan, the Tongafiti, or the essen- 

 tially indiscriminate general Polynesian. Although the last element is 

 neutral, we shall keep the record complete by allotting to it a percent- 



Table 31. 



age, just as we shall find some light by allotting a percentage to each 

 of the really distinctive elements. These ratios are computed upon net 

 stocks as presented in Table 3 1 . 



The story which this table has to tell is not hard reading. It is in 

 two chapters, and we shall turn first to the minor one, the record of the 



