- Site 296
1658 hits
The largest remaining heiau in Koʻolauloa, mostly intact. - 17-2 Kaumakaʻulaʻula
1742 hits
A possible location for Kaumakaʻulaʻula is the point in the distance, based on McAllisterʻs description of the heiau. - Hanawao, 2017
1744 hits
The striking upright pōhaku remaining at Hanawao. Althought McAllister uses the name "Hanawao," the family that cares for its graves at the heiau suggests the name "Kanawao," which has four possible translations in Nā Puke Wehewehe. "Hanawao" has no suggested translations. - Hanawao, 2017
1712 hits
A lower corner of Hanawao / Kanawao. This is the most intact part of the heiau. Althought McAllister uses the name "Hanawao," the family that cares for its graves at the heiau suggests the name "Kanawao," which has four possible translations in Nā Puke Wehewehe. "Hanawao" has no suggested translations. - Kaʻaʻawa 1, 2017
1765 hits
A substantial platform heiau, with evidence of occasional ceremonial visits - kava root in 2006 and a large wooden bowl in 2017. - Kaʻaʻawa 2, 2017
1786 hits
The same enclosure as in a 2006 image. A large, unrecorded structure mauka of the road, at the foot of the pali. It is made up of an incline, terraced and paved in areas with ʻili ʻili, and a large C-shaped structure on the north side. This may be a heiau or the residence of a person with some rank and status. - Huilua loko iʻa, Joe Kekona, Kahana Bay, 1998
2114 hits
Joseph Kekona was the last traditional keeper of Huilua loko iʻa (fishpond) in the 1940s. In this photo he is in his 90s, but still full of stories of the pond, a place for mullet.