Repoii of a Journey Annaid ihe M'orld. 



19 



size. A third specimen in the same line is shown in Fig. 12, in 

 which the somewhat larger bowl seems to have been used for a 

 liquid, having an exit through the mouth of one of the figures. 



There are two of the Necker 

 Island stone figures, the larger 

 18 inches high, the other the 

 smallest known (Fig. 13). 

 Those in the Bishop Museum 

 have been described and fig- 

 ured (Memoirs, I, pi. Ixii). 

 Of the wooden gods besides 

 the large one figured in Oc- 

 casional Papers, I, pi. xiv, 

 there are two others note- 

 worthy : one ( Fig. 14 ) was 

 obtained by Messrs. Tyer- 

 maun and Bennett from a 

 heiau at Kailua, Hawaii, and 

 is 47.5 inches high ; the other 

 (Fig. 15) is much broken, is 

 54 inches high, and seems to 

 represent a female form, al- 

 though the features seem 

 hardly those of the gentler 

 sex ; it was obtained from a 

 heiau. To these may be add- 

 ed the little god 12.8 inches 

 high (Fig. 16) which has an 

 expression hardly god-like. 

 A New Zealand trumpet 

 * 25.7 inches long (Fig. 17) 



has the flare beautifully carved ; these trumpets were usually 

 carved in two pieces and fitted neatly together longitudinalh-; 

 they are far from common in collections. 



The Natural History Museum at Kensington has expanded 

 far more than the public exhibits show, but these last include more 

 of the well-mounted bird groups than before, and among animals 



the okapi is conspicuous. Series illustrating evolution, and es- 



[167] 



NEW ZEALAND TRUMPET, 

 BRITISH MUSEUM. 



