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Ca4-20 Ca4-21 Ca4-22 Ca4-23 Ca4-24 (100) Ca4-25

Moko in Ca4-23 is located in a day of Jupiter. The following peculiar manu rere has no eye and 3 maro feathers are sprouting up front. We can compare with the similar constellation of glyphs in Gb3-13--14:

Gb3-10 Gb3-11 Gb3-12 Gb3-13 Gb3-14 (305) Gb3-15 Gb3-16

The strange haati sign at left in Gb3-14 is similar to the bottom part of the strange 'double wings' in Ca4-22. It could mean 'leaving and arriving' (cfr summary at haati).

The hole in Rogo (Gb3-15) could correspond to the 'ball' at bottom in Ca4-21. But there are holes also where the eyes should have been in the manu rere glyhs. Maybe the 'ball' at bottom in Ca4-21 should rather be compared with the 'ball' being born at the bottom of hanau moko in Gb3-13.

There are similarities, but there are also differences. 8 + 8 'feathers' in Gb3-10, glyph number 236 counted from Ga3-6, can be compared with the pair of 'feathered' glyphs in C:

4
Ca4-20 (96) Ca4-25 (101)

8 * 29.5 = 236 is a Moon measure and likewise 8 + 8 = 16.

6 + 6 = 12 is a Sun measure, and 420 = 7 * 60 could mean the '7th flame of the sun' (cfr at tagata), i.e. Ca4-20 completes the cycle of Sun in a conjunction with Moon.

5 dark nights later a new light is ignited, and 'one more' cycle will begin. It is a day of Saturn. There are 5 'feathers' in front.