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10. The strange glyph type with a pair of bird heads looking in opposite directions I have labelled manu kake ('climbing bird'), because that is what Metoro usually said.

It was used to define where a new great time period was about to begin, possibly only at the doorstep to a Sun season. In the text of G it was also used to indicate another division of another kind of year:

60 298
Ga3-1 (61) Gb5-6 (360)
300
360 = 18 * 20
104 258
Ga4-21 (105) Gb5-10 (364)
260
364 = 14 * 26

The end of 300 days 'under Sun' is a tagata glyph, which probably means a 'fully grown' period.

360 we would naturally think of as 12 * 30 days. But a better alternative is to think of 15 * 20 = 10 * 30 =  300 as the basic measure for Sun. Once the Polynesians apparently had allotted 10 months for Sun:

"From the natives of South Island [of New Zealand] White [John] heard a quaint myth which concerns the calendar and its bearing on the sweet potato crop. Whare-patari, who is credited with introducing the year of twelve months into New Zealand, had a staff with twelve notches on it. He went on a visit to some people called Rua-roa (Long pit) who were famous round about for their extensive knowledge. They inquired of Whare how many months the year had according to his reckoning. He showed them the staff with its twelve notches, one for each month. They replied: 'We are in error since we have but ten months. Are we wrong in lifting our crop of kumara (sweet potato) in the eighth month?' Whare-patari answered: 'You are wrong. Leave them until the tenth month. Know you not that there are two odd feathers in a bird's tail? Likewise there are two odd months in the year.' The grateful tribe of Rua-roa adopted Whare's advice and found the sweet potato crop greatly improved as the result ... The Maori further accounted for the twelve months by calling attention to the fact that there are twelve feathers in the tail of the huia bird and twelve in the choker or bunch of white feathers which adorns the neck of the parson bird." (Makemson, a.a.)

The Maya indians had a 'sacred calendar' (tzolkin) which measured out 13 * 20 = 260 days. But they had also a calendar with 18 * 20 + 5 = 365 days.