Emory—An Archaeological Survey of Haleakala 243 
fill the enclosure with gravel. Excavation sunk to bed rock revealed 
no human remains, or implements. 
Below the platform under the dike is a series of three ter- 
Paces xX XE A, and fig: 3, 2D). ‘The bottom»: terrace, nearly 
buried by rocks from above, supports a second terrace 3% feet 
high, 12 feet long, 5% feet wide, which in turn supports the top. 
1 foot 8 inches high and 14 feet long. With pick and shovel we 
laid bare the front wall of the terrace which had been 1% feet 
underground and 1 foot above. It ran along for 9% feet, then 
took a right-angle turn and extended out for 5% feet. We 
removed the sand inside the wall down to 3 feet without finding 
anything of interest. We next dug along the face of the dike 
which forms the north side of the other two terraces of the series, 
and extended from this trench into the terraces themselves. On 
a level with the surface of the top terrace, 5 feet back from the 
front wall and 5% feet from the cliff we found a tooth that had 
belonged to an adult, and then a skull face up. Near at hand were 
fragments of other bones. There was a stone to the east of the 
skull and a small stone resting on top of it. On the same contour 
as the terraces just described and under the north dike is an inter- 
esting series of five terraces (Pl. XXII, B, and fig. 3, E) which 
measure as follows: 
Terrace Length of front wall Height Width of terrace 
Feet Feet Feet 
LS FSN ICIS eee a ee 12 2 5 
Become csi: os 14 aN 
NEST 0 ee nee 15 4 ai 
[EXOT hs geen Rene 18 6 3 
doje aia ane eee TI 2 74 
Each terrace supports the one above it. The fourth is the 
largest of the series, and on it has been built the top terrace. 
We recovered the bones of an adult female and a child of 
four years of age within the space of the top terrace but also deep 
enough to have been in the fourth terrace. The skull of the 
woman was missing, but the jawbone in good preservation lay 
right side up 17 inches below the surface and 36 from the front 
[og] 
