- Oneʻula, Area 3216, 1998
267 hits
Part of a wall complex. Destroyed. - Oneʻula, Area 3215, 1998, 1998
227 hits
Feature K. A small enclosure and two upright stones. Destroyed. - Oneʻula, Area 3215, 1998
240 hits
Labeled feature T. A small platform and upright stone, probably a fishing shrine. Destroyed. - Oneʻula, Area 3215, 1998
233 hits
Labeled feature T. A small platform and upright stone, probably a fishing shrine. Note the strikikng similarity between this stone and the one in area 3203. Destroyed. - Oneʻula, Area 4278, 1998
243 hits
A small fishing shrine near Feature B, unrecorded. Destroyed. - Oneʻula, Area 3215, 1998, 1998
248 hits
A small fishing shrine near Feature X. This shrine was the focus of protests. Destroyed. - Oneʻula, Area 3215, 1998
241 hits
An unrecorded upright stone near the beach that may hold cultural significance. It was near a berm but did not show evidence of bulldozer blade marks. - Oneʻula, Area 3215, 1998
228 hits
Feature K. A small enclosure. Destroyed. - Oneʻula, 1998
260 hits - Site O2
208 hits
A low enclosure. - Sites O24-O38 in the mountains above Honolulu.
194 hits
Agricultural terraces up the side of a narrow valley. - Sites O24-O38 in the mountains above Honolulu.
181 hits
Agricultural terraces up the side of a narrow valley. - Quarry marks, Keaʻau, 2017
206 hits
Local families relate that the corner stones of r Kawaihaʻo were quarried at this site. - Low wall of a pā hale, 2001
372 hits
A platform lies at the north side of this low enclosure, probably a house platform. - Platform at ʻIliʻilikea, 1992
377 hits
Note the kū (upriught) and papa (flat, lying down) stones on the near side. These were not there on subsequent visits. - Platform, 2001
393 hits
Alkthough this may originally be a natural feature, it is bordered on two sides by a substantial wall. Its smaller stones may have been taken for the construction of the nearby highway, as happened elsewhere. - Mauka wall of a large platform, 2014
391 hits
The mauka section of a wall on two sides of a platform - possible heiau. - Albert Silva near his home in ʻŌhikilolo, 2012
201 hits - Kiʻi Pōhaku (petroglyphs), 2004
205 hits
The petroglyphs were filled with beach sand for this image - Corner of a structure, Keaʻau, 2018
192 hits - Marae at Keaʻau, 2018
195 hits
Used as a teaching place according to local families with ancestral ties to the area. They hope to restore it and use it again for that purpose. - Unu (heiau) at Keawaʻula, 2020
199 hits - Waiʻanae Kiʻi Pōhaku (petroglyph), 2017
198 hits - Puʻukānoahoa Koʻa (fishing shrine), 2003
199 hits
One of very few left on Oʻahu. McAllister lists it as destroyed. - Leinaakaʻuhane at Kaʻena, 2017
195 hits - Pōhakuloa, 2017
197 hits
The pōhaku is a monster slain by Hiʻiaka at Mākua and thrown over the mountain, to land on the Mokulaea side of Kaʻena - The platform above Leinakaʻuhane, 2017
212 hits - ʻAlauiki fishing shrine, 1995
200 hits - Lualualei, 2002
195 hits - Kāneʻilioloa, 1997
206 hits
Most sources give the name of this unu (heiau) as Kūʻilioloa, but certain Waiʻanae families have passed down an older Kāne name and suggest that it may have been rededicated - like Kāneʻaki. - The Pōhaku above Kamaile Unu, 1991
188 hits
Local families attribute significance to these pōhaku - Punamanō, Kahuku, 2018
167 hits
Punamanō is a pond a little mauka from this pōhaku, but an elderly Kahuku resident heard stories as a child of an underground connection between the pond and pōhaku, and of a woman who used to make the passage. - Kalakoi, 2015
167 hits
Identified by Rudy Mitchel as the companion stone to Kalakū at Waimea Bay. Kū and Ahuena are their other names. - Nīoi, 1994
181 hits
Note the lua paʻa (lined pit). - Bramble 3
234 hits - Bramble 4
239 hits - Bramble 5
228 hits - Bramble 6
228 hits - Bramble 9
222 hits - Bramble 10
225 hits - Bramble 14
220 hits - Bramble 15
242 hits - Bramble 16
227 hits - Bramble 17
230 hits - Bonneville, 2022
223 hits - Hwy 30 1
231 hits - Hwy 30 2
220 hits - Hwy 30 3
217 hits - Hwy 30 4
221 hits - Hwy 30 5
213 hits