The right part seems more important than the left, as the right part is bigger. Is the right part a toki? The form is not the usual one for a toki. And its head is bent inwards, not outwards.

This tea glyph in period no. 1 corresponds to its opposite, the 'shadowy' mango glyph in period no. 2:

Furthermore, the unusual shape of toki corresponds (though not exactly) to the toki in the hands of these two persons in periods nos. 8 and 9:

As the first of these two glyphs is immediately followed by a dark underwater bird

and as the mango ('shadow') has its 'special adze' pointing outwards too, whereas the 'special adze' is pointing inwards in the 'tea'-glyph (Ea1-9), and as the second of these two persons is located in the dark new moon period, it is possible that the 'special adze' means a bony (dead) adze which we should read as a sleeeping adze.

Perhaps we should even read the two persons with adzes as artisans on their way to make a canoe (Ea3-31--32)? And is one of them dipping his adze into the sea to wake it up (Ea3-19--20)?