Rongorongo text VText V of the rongorongo corpus, the Honolulu oar, also known as Honolulu tablet 3 or Honolulu 3622, may be one of two dozen surviving rongorongo texts. Its authenticity has been questioned. Other namesV is the standard designation, from Barthel (1958). Fischer (1997) refers to it as RR13. LocationBernice P. Bishop Museum, Honolulu. Catalog # B.03622. DescriptionApparently the end of a European or American oar, like tablet A, though of unknown wood, and cut with a steel blade. It measures 71.8 × 9 × 2.8 cm and is not fluted. Side a is worm-eaten and split at its thick end; side b has fire damage. ProvenanceCollector J. L. Young of Auckland purchased three of the Honolulu tablets circa 1888 "from Rapanui through a reliable agent", who Fischer thinks was probably Alexander Salmon, Jr. It was transferred to the Bishop Museum in August 1920. Métraux (1938) did not include V as he did not think it was authentic:
However, Barthel (1958:32) believed it to be authentic. Fischer is of the opinion that the burnt wood,
However, this reasoning is not sound:[original research?] juxtaposing the two common glyphs 200 man and 700 fish is hardly remarkable. The only ligature is the 200.200.11-2, whereas known authentic texts, even short ones, have numerous ligatures. TextSide a has two areas of text: a single 22-glyph line, with a separate pair of glyphs slightly above and 4 cm to the right of this (on the other side of the label). Fischer reports that on side b pencil rubbings reveal possible traces of an inscription at the edge of the burnt area.
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