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then the seemingly inconsequential placement of an armband or its exchange improperly executed could have dire consequences—years of social misadventure. For instance, these armbands, when exchanged, can travel in only one direction; the necklaces must travel in the opposite direction. All the Kula exchange is caught up in magic. Shirley F. Campbell, the anthropologist who accompanied us on the trip, studied prows and splashboards made for canoes for Kula exchange. Every detail of the exchange is fertile ground for study and interpretation. The splashboard is a piece of wood below the bow. Outrigger canoes have a double prow; symbolically front and back HYLAND Credit: 14MPM