Victoria Veriamo a Huki a Parapara, also known as Viriamo (c. 1840–1941) was one of the last surviving indigenous women of Easter Island to have been tattooed using traditional practices, along with Ana Eva Hei.
Her face featured geometric stripes on her forehead and an adze-like design on her cheek, and her back was decorated with the ao motif, which symbolised a paddle.
Her back tattoos match those sketched by J. Linton Palmer in 1853; though she would have been older than he depicted at the time, it is thought that his drawings were idealizations.
[1] When Alfred Métraux visited the island in 1941, Viriamo was "the only living person" to have "witnessed the functioning of the ancient culture".
[9][2]:39 Tepano told Métraux on his visit that much of his knowledge that he shared came from his mother, who at that time could no longer speak.