The 'Ewa Plain

dc.contributor.author Tuggle, David
dc.date.accessioned 2024-02-08T20:00:44Z
dc.date.available 2024-02-08T20:00:44Z
dc.date.issued 1997-06-01
dc.description.abstract It was called the Plain of Kaupe'a, or Pu'uokapolei, or Kai'ona,l this scorched limestone corner of O'ahu now know as the 'Ewa Plain, part of the ahupua'a of Honouliuli, in the moku of'Ewa (Fig. 1). From a vantage point at the southern tip of the Wai'anae mountains, one can see the mountain-side level out to meet the plain (Fig. 2), unremarkable except for its expanse, the distant edge blurring into ocean. The landform of the plain is an emerged reef that stretches from Pearl Harbor to the Wai'anae coast (Fig. 3). The lower portion is exposed limestone pocked with sinkholes, the upper portion is covered by a soil mantle. This is a hot land that goes without rain for weeks or months, then may endure the downpour of a kona storm dropping rain measured in inches per hour, water that disappears into the limestone, leaving few surface drainage channels. Only one feature breaks the slope of this land: the small cinder cone of Pu'uokapolei, which stands along the upper edge of the plain. Pu'uokapolei was the common landmark for travelers of the nineteenth century making the hard journey between the upper Pearl Harbor area and Wai'anae, with hot, barren Kaupe'a well known as a place of spirits without good intentions (I'i 1963:27, 29; Nakuina 1990:54; Fornander 1916-20, V:318; Pukui 1943:60). To the Hawaiians of old Pu'uokapolei was not only a landmark, but a place of spiritual force, associated with Kamapua'a,2 his grandmother Kamaunua-Niho, and the sisters of Pele, particularly Hi'iaka and Kapo' ulakina'u, the eponymous deity of the hill.
dc.format.extent 29 pages
dc.identifier.issn 0890-1678
dc.identifier.uri https://hdl.handle.net/10524/74521
dc.subject Ewa Plain
dc.subject limestone
dc.subject cinder cone
dc.subject soil mantle
dc.subject Pu'uokapolei
dc.subject Honouliuli
dc.subject Oahu
dc.subject Archaeological
dc.subject Settlement
dc.subject Radiocarbon
dc.subject Colonization
dc.subject environmental change
dc.subject Kualaka'i
dc.subject plants
dc.title The 'Ewa Plain
dc.type.dcmi Text
dspace.entity.type
prism.endingpage 36
prism.number 1
prism.publicationname Hawaiian Archaeology
prism.startingpage 8
prism.volume 6
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