KE-A-LI-A
s. A place where the salt water is brought or caused to flow inland, the sea then shut out and the water evaporated, leaving the salt, which may be gathered up. See ALIAPAAKAI.
s. A place where the salt water is brought or caused to flow inland, the sea then shut out and the water evaporated, leaving the salt, which may be gathered up. See ALIAPAAKAI.
1. Lowlands so close to the sea that the soil becomes moist from the salt water.
2. A place where the salt water is brought or caused to flow inland, the sea then shut out and the water evaporated, leaving the salt, which may be gathered up.
salt pan. Land section, South Kona, Hawaii.
Papa helu loli | Wehewehe Wikiwiki update log
1. Beach, Hoʻokena, Hawaiʻi. Narrow calcareous sand and coral rubble beach on a low, wide lava bench fronting the beach homes at Keālia. 2. Beach, landing, surf site, Keālia, Kauaʻi. Long, wide calcareous sand beach fronted by a sandbar. Several shorebreak surf sites are on the sandbar. A small jetty at the north end of the beach marks the former interisland steamer landing. Keālia Stream crosses the south end of the beach. Keālia was originally part of the Makee Sugar Company until 1934, when it became part of Līhuʻe Plantation in a consolidation. Līhuʻe Plantation continued to grow sugar until 1990, when it terminated operations on its 3,300 acres of agricultural land between Keālia and Anahola. The ahupuaʻa of Keālia (6,700 acres), including Keālia and Donkey Beaches, was sold by Amfac Land Company in 1998 to Keālia Plantation LLC. 3. Surf site, Māʻalaea, Maui. Off Keālia Pond at the east end of the Māʻalaea Bay. 4. Bay, beach, Keālia, Oʻahu. Section of Mokulēʻia Beach. Calcareous sand beach on a bay near the west end of Dillingham Airfield that is within the land division of Keālia. Lit., the salt bed.
Place where salt water was brought or caused to flow inland, the sea then shut out, and the water evaporated. The salt remained; aliapaʻakai, salt. (A.)
salt marsh; salt pan.
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