[8] A shell.
[9] See [p. 29, note 4], for Borneo parallel.
[11] Bamboo sprouts.
[12] The fruit of a wild vine.
[13] The chief incidents in this tale resemble those in the Sea Dayak story of Simpang Impang. See Hose and McDougall, Pagan Tribes of Borneo, Vol. II, p. 144 ff. (London, 1912.)
[14] A town in Ilocos Sur.
[15] A mound of earth raised by the ants.
[16] Same idea is held by the Ilocano. See Reyes, El Folklore Filipino, p. 34, Manila, 1889. See also [p. 29, note 7].