County: Honolulu
Site_Name: Kaualua or Kauwalua.
Island: Oahu
Traditional_District: Kona
District: Honolulu
Ahupuaa: Moanalua
Site_Function: R-Other site type
Complex: No
Tax_Map_Key: 1-1-
State_Site_Number: 50-80-13-085
BM_site_number: 50-Oa-A07-009
Project_Number:
Entered_By:
Entry_Date:
Updated_By:
Updated_Date:
National_State_Park_Site_Number:
Misc_Site_Number:
Map_ID_Number:
Photo_ID_Number:
Slide_ID_Number:
Surveyor: McAllister
Survey_Type: Recon. survey
Survey_Date: 1930
Excavation:
Form_of_Ownership: .
Owner: ?
Owner_Address:
Field_Notes:
Bag_Notes:
Dating:
History:
Status:
SiteType: Kaualua or Kauwalua. It has received attention from a number of writers probably because of the unusual and bizarre nature of a "house of bones" which was located at Lapakea in Moanalua Valley. It is a small land on the plateau between Puukapu and Puu o Ma'o, inland of the highway. Nothing at present remains of this site, though the possible burial place of the bones from the fence is still in evidence.
Bibliography: J. McAllister, 1933, BPBM Bulletin #104, Arch. of Oahu, Site 85, pp. 95, 96 Sterling/Summers, 1962, BPBM Press, Sites of Oahu, p. 332 Fornander Coll. Vol 6, p. 290 Stokes, BPBM, Occasional Papers, Vol 4, No 2, p. 40 Corney, Voyages in the northern Pacific, p. 114 Brigham, BPBM, Memoirs, Vol I, No 4, pp. 108, 109 Dibble, History of the Sandwich Islands, p. 40 Fornander, Polynesian Race, Vol 2, p. 226
Site_Name: Kaualua or Kauwalua.
Island: Oahu
Traditional_District: Kona
District: Honolulu
Ahupuaa: Moanalua
Site_Function: R-Other site type
Complex: No
Tax_Map_Key: 1-1-
State_Site_Number: 50-80-13-085
BM_site_number: 50-Oa-A07-009
Project_Number:
Entered_By:
Entry_Date:
Updated_By:
Updated_Date:
National_State_Park_Site_Number:
Misc_Site_Number:
Map_ID_Number:
Photo_ID_Number:
Slide_ID_Number:
Surveyor: McAllister
Survey_Type: Recon. survey
Survey_Date: 1930
Excavation:
Form_of_Ownership: .
Owner: ?
Owner_Address:
Field_Notes:
Bag_Notes:
Dating:
History:
Status:
SiteType: Kaualua or Kauwalua. It has received attention from a number of writers probably because of the unusual and bizarre nature of a "house of bones" which was located at Lapakea in Moanalua Valley. It is a small land on the plateau between Puukapu and Puu o Ma'o, inland of the highway. Nothing at present remains of this site, though the possible burial place of the bones from the fence is still in evidence.
Bibliography: J. McAllister, 1933, BPBM Bulletin #104, Arch. of Oahu, Site 85, pp. 95, 96 Sterling/Summers, 1962, BPBM Press, Sites of Oahu, p. 332 Fornander Coll. Vol 6, p. 290 Stokes, BPBM, Occasional Papers, Vol 4, No 2, p. 40 Corney, Voyages in the northern Pacific, p. 114 Brigham, BPBM, Memoirs, Vol I, No 4, pp. 108, 109 Dibble, History of the Sandwich Islands, p. 40 Fornander, Polynesian Race, Vol 2, p. 226
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