This type of glyph is unusual. I believe the top part could be GD36. And the lower part could be GD69 as veiwed upside down. I can find a similar glyph in Mamari which seems to support these ideas.

Cb5-5 (491)

Bright Fire (*125.4)

ihe toga maa

July 24 (205, 571)

*125.4 - *41.4 (Bharani) = *84 → date for Julian spring equinox.

*125 - *64 (precessional distance down to the Golden Age of the Bull) = *61 = *491 - *366 + *64.

The lower part could, however, represent a nut. And the top part could illustrate a gap.

Or the top part might be Upsilon:

... Upsilon  ... is the 20th letter of the Greek alphabet. In the system of Greek numerals [it] has a value of 400. It  is derived from the Phoenician waw ... Waw (wāw 'hook') is the sixth letter of the Semitic abjads ...

There are other possible clues. If we try to keep in mind the sequence of glyphs in Mamari and then compare with some sequences in Tahua, we will find similarities.

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