DIMENSIONS AND STRUCTURAL DETAILS. IOI 
to 6.75 inches; 3361, 4.75 and 6 inches, no flange. ‘These pieces lack 
the scrupulosity of the work of clubwrights working in other types, 
yet none the less on that account is every detail significant. There can 
be no doubt that the flange is integral to the shaft and a necessary 
part of the design. Piece 3361 is a very rude specimen; the flange 
escapes the tape, but its motive immediately appears when we examine 
the next unit of the head, for there is a notable decrease in perimeter, 
implying a flange. | 
The lipped clubs offer little of interest in their shaft detail. In two 
of the types the shaft is of uniform diameter as far as the beginning 
of the roughened panel, and there engages with the detail of the head; 
in the highly ornate type with worked panels the diameter of the shaft 
increases slowly from haft to the same critical point. 
TABLE 49. 
Haft. Piece No. 
Ends similar: 
3147 a, 2267, 3100 b, 3100 4, 3780, 3780 a 
3147, 3780 € 
sgt |) Sib eye 
-..| 3144, 3185, 2491, 2488, 2490, 2489, 3186, 3143, 3780 ¢ 
....} 2265, 3177, 2492, 3780 d, 2493 

The maces have shafts of practically uniform diameter; probably no 
significance attaches to the fact that in 3792 a the shaft circumference 
immediately next the head is half an inch smaller than at the haft. 
In the talavalu the shaft is generally of uniform diameter, such 
enlargement toward the head as may exist being entirely due to the 
rather distinct shoulder from which arises the serrated blade; in 2272 
this expansion gives the dimensions of 4.5 inches at haft and 11 inches 
at shoulder. 
The lapalapa follow the general shape of the leaf-stalk from which 
they have been conventionalized—a smooth increase from haft to head. 
Similarly the paddle clubs, offering no distinct demarcation between 
shaft and head, do not call for consideration here. 
In the carinated clubs the shaft is of equal diameter throughout 
until the point is reached where it expands toward the head unit. The 
same note applies to the serrated, the crescent, and the mushroom clubs. 
In the 2 horned clubs measured the shafts are generally of the same 
diameter; one increases by a slight amount next the blade, the other 
similarly decreases. 
The head-forms are so various, congruent in each type of weapon 
but not susceptible of coordination, that it will be just as well in this 
place to indicate the separation in source, which will be subjected to 
