- In the mountains above Honolulu. Kiʻi pōhaku (petroglyphs) at site 1010
310 hits
The petroglyphs were first noticed by rock art expert Mikilani Ho. - Kaunihokahi 1, 2000
1934 hits
An upright stone and low platform within the large heiau, mostly looted for its stones by the Hauʻula Dairy decades ago. - Site N15 in the mountains above Honolulu.
291 hits
A large cave that could easily hold 30 standing people. Terraces and a platfomr are adjacent. In this area is a cave associated with a shark - perhaps this one. - N23 in the mountains above Honolulu.
297 hits
A land division wall that runs up and down the sides of a narrow valley, perpendicular to the stream. - Site N15 in the mountains above Honolulu.
282 hits
A large cave that could easily hold 30 standing people. Terraces and a platfomr are adjacent. In this area is a cave associated with a shark - perhaps this one. - Site N24
277 hits
A large pōhaku inside an oval enclosure. The size of the pōhaku makes the enclosure impractical for anything but ceremonial use. Similar enclosures are to be found in Pālolo Valley. - Maunawila 3, 2014
1937 hits
The most prominent stone remaining at Maunawila, close to a large flat pōhaku in the central platform. - Maunawila 5, 2014
1809 hits
Note the dressed limestone slabs - very rare on Oʻahu structures.