can archaic chinese jades be turned into cryptocurrencies?
#5

(05-10-2025, 08:06 AM)*天哥* Wrote:  Yo bro, may i humbly suggest to u to bring this to the National Museum and see if any expert there could help u value it n also see if it is fake ( most likely ) . You just place this here, nobody will know or understand your jade piece.

Since u r so free anyway, just a ride there should b no problem 2 u lah.

In the unlikely event if they value it to be genuine, u can return here and F...k everyone who had scorn at u here.

You think I stupid or what?

What you suggested, bring my Hongshan Culture jade artifacts to a local museum for verification, I have done it, 33 years ago

BTW many of my close friends have made such suggestion but they are ignorant to the fact that our local museums does not have GENUINE Hongshan Culture jade C-shaped dragons or Hongshan Culture jade artifacts while I have 50 GENUINE pieces

You cannnot be an expert on something you have never handled, get it?

Museums outside China, except Taiwan also don't have any Hongshan Culture jade C-shaped dragons

Museums in China has less than 10 pieces while I have collected 16 GENUINE C-shaped Hongshan Culture jade dragons over the past 33 years

As I have said before here at Sgtalk many times, I AM the WORLD No. 2 expert on Hongshan Culture jades, behind the No.1 expert in China, Yao Yuzhong, who is same age as me and started robbing tombs in the 1980s while I started collecting Hongshan Culture jades in the early 1990s 

AI Overview

Yao Yuzhong began his tomb-robbing career in the 1980s, as he learned the trade from his father and started with graves from the Neolithic Hongshan culture. His career spanned approximately 30 years and involved looting relics from the Hongshan cultural relics protection region before he was arrested.  

Key Details
  • Start of Career: The 1980s. 

  • Learned from: His father, who taught him the skills of tomb raiding. 

  • Initial Target: Graves from the Neolithic Hongshan culture, which are shallow and require skills in perception rather than just digging. 

  • Career Length: Approximately 30 years. 

  • Conclusion of Career: His operations were exposed in 2015, and he was arrested for his role in the largest grave-robbing case in China since 1949. 

  • Techniques: Yao used his knowledge to determine the location of ancient tombs, sometimes employing feng shui and astrology

[Image: GheRC7q.png]

"Knowing others is intelligence; knowing yourself is true wisdom. Mastering others is strength; mastering yourself is true power. If you realize that you have enough, you are truly rich.” ― Lao Tzu
Reply



Forum Jump:


Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)