Haleets, also spelled as Halelos, Xalelos and Xalilc, is derived from the Lushootseed name of the rock, x̌alilc, meaning "marked rock".[1][6] It is also known in English as Figurehead Rock. Its purpose is unknown but the Suquamish Museum curator and archivist Charlie Sigo has stated that it may have been a boundary marker.[7] An amateur astronomer has proposed a theory that it has a calendrical function (see Archaeoastronomy).[3][7][8][notes 1]
The rock is 5 feet (1.5 m) tall and 7 feet (2.1 m) long. It sits about 100 feet (30 m) offshore,[7] and has been marked with chiseled and drilled Coast Survey features since 1856, and a bronze geodetic mark was placed on it in 1934.[9] Some sources say that the rock is one of three prominent Salish Sea petroglyphs that were always on the shoreline,[10] but tectonic activity around the Seattle Fault may have put Haleets in the intertidal zone.[notes 2]
^Bainbridge Island Historical Museum 2012: "The petroglyph lies precisely west of the Skykomish canyon 60 miles away. Standing at the petroglyph on the vernal and autumnal equinox, one can view the rising sun shining straight through the canyon."[4]
^Alcalá 2013: "Within human memory, Laxelks, now called Wing Point, fell about three feet during an earthquake."[6]
Leen, Daniel (2015), "Puget (Lushootseed) Salish sites", A Gallery of Northwest Petroglyphs: Shamanic Art of the Pacific Northwest, archived from the original on 2016-10-12, retrieved 2015-04-24