ia 
Notes on Hawatian Petroglyphs. 51 
diameter of 2.5 inches to .5 inch, where they met. Four pairs of 
finished holes were seen, and one partly drilled. 
In a cave on a mountain a little to the north-west of Waiohinu 
petroglyphs were reported, but the native engaged as a guide 
failed to appear, and consequently these were missed. 
About two miles to the south of Naalehu on the east wall of 
a lava tunnel were found the petroglyphs (Figs. 21, 22) described 
by Westervelt.'5 The graving had been done by chipping away 

eG p22 
the white deposit on the surface of the black lava walls. This 
deposit, when hammered, crumbled irregularly, on account of 
which perhaps the workmanship lacked the symmetry and even 
finish noted at other places. Besides the more common single- 
lined forms, some with outlined and solid bodies may be noticed. 
In the middle of Fig. 22 may be seen a petroglyph of a male with 
three-toed feet. To the right of the middle of Fig. 21 are three 
short parallel strokes—an unusual occurrence, but noted elsewhere 
by Judd and Kramer. 
Hawaiian Annual, 1906, p. 164. 
[275] 
