40 Director's Annual Report. 
long, depicted with a rectangular abdomen (Fig. 10). ‘The head- 
less figure directly below is 10.5 inches long. A little more to the 
west than the last 1s a curved-limbed figure with a broken-lined 
trunk and a line between the feet suggestive of a skirt (Fig. rr). 
In a number of cases the males are definitely marked, leaving it 
open to the suggestion that the unmarked figures must be females. 
But considering the number of unmarked figures, it does not seem 
e [‘ feel|" 
HnGamoe 
zie 
reasonable to conclude that all these were females. Nevertheless 
the Hawaiians were children of Nature and were accustomed to 
regard herassheis. The woman’s dress was the pa’u, a wrapping 
of tapa extending from the waist to the knee. 
To the west of the hula group is a jumble of petroglyphs, the 
most interesting being the deeply incised figure of Kamalalawalu 
(Figs. 1, 12 and 13). It is more than probable that this figure 
was not always beheaded, as outlines of what may have been the 
lower part of the head are still traceable. Where the head should 
be there is a natural crack in the bed-rock which seems to have 
[264 ] 
