1. Bought from Seaouke Yue [You Xiaoxi] 游筱溪 of Shanghai 上海, in New York. For price, see Original Miscellaneous List, p. 326. $250.
2. (Undated Folder Sheet note) Original attribution: Chinese. Chou [Zhou] 周. See further, S.I. 1397, Appendix IX.
3. (John Ellerton Lodge, 1929) Chou [Zhou] 周 (?).
4. (Isabel Ingram Mayer, 1945) Ch'ing [Qing] 清 dynasty reproduction of Chou [Zhou] 周 type. Material soft. Color applied (?)
5. (Undated Folder Sheet note) Sp. G. is 2.874.
6. (Howard Phillip Stern, 1956) Box for this piece purports this jade to be from the collection of the Viceroy Tuan Fang [Duanfang] 端方.
7. (H. Elise Buckman, 1964) The Envelope File, which has now been destroyed, contained the following statement: "Excavated at An Hsi [Anxi] 安溪, in Chekiang [Zhejiang] 浙江."
8. (Thomas Lawton, 1978) Attribution changed from Ch'ing [Qing] 清 to Western Chou [Zhou] 周.
9. (Julia K. Murray, 1983) The attribution is changed from Western Chou [Zhou] 周 to Neolithic, ca. 2000 BCE.
10. (Jeffrey Smith per Keith Wilson, July 17, 2008) Ceremonial Objects added as secondary classification.
11. (Stephen Allee, March 23, 2009) Added designation "nephrite" to Medium as per Janet Douglas using Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (January 8, 2009).
12. (Jeffrey Smith, April 11, 2016) Transferred from Description: (Jenny So, from Jade Project Database) Mottled tan, reddish and dark brown. Biconical hole, off-center, with ridge at meeting point. Evenly round, unevenly thick. Surface even and smooth.
Perforated disc of the type "pi;" bored from both sides leaving median ridges; obverse: mottled, lustrous shades from cream to dark mahogany brown; reverse has a paint-like surface of warm tan with a cloudy dark brown area; both surfaces speckled with dark strata mark. Rim has old and recent chipped areas and one probable mend. Box.
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