66 Director's Annual Report. 
and Judd, Puu Lua by the Government Survey. A number of 
boulders cover the top, and on them are many faint petroglyphs. 
Fornander” saw in two of them the double trident of Siwa, and on 
this account associated the gravings with phallic worship. I cannot 
say that Fornander’s surmise is not correct, but the figures I saw 
looked more like the representation of a male with raised arms. 
Kramer and Judd describe and illustrate a number of the petro- 
glyphs, adding to the forms already noted herein, figures with 
six limbs. 

FIG. 45. 
Oahu.—Thrum and Judd’ describe petroglyphs on the ceil- 
ing and floor of a sea-worn cave (Fig. 47) in the tufaceous side of 
Koko crater, at the east end of the island. Since then one of the 
figures has been cut out and removed. ‘There is a smaller cave in 
the same hill, one-quarter of a mile to the south, and on the ceil- 
ing of this is part of one of the common form of carvings. 
At Helemano, in Waialua, Mathison saw a stone covered 
with petroglyphs, of which he gives an illustration of a draw- 

Polynesian Race, vol. i, p. 50. 
” Hawaiian Annual, 1900, p. 126; Ig04, p. 179. 
[290] 
