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On-site protection key for canoe ( 2003-09-30 09:27) (China Daily) A 6-metre-long, 60-centimetre-wide wooden canoe was covered by white cotton, lying in the centre of a 500-square-metre hall at the Xiaoshan Museum, situated by Xianghu Lake. A worker was spraying medicinal liquid onto the canoe, and the strong smell spread throughout the building.
"What worries me most now is the protection of the canoe,'' said Shi Jianong, curator of Xiaoshan Museum. "The high temperatures of this summer have had a relatively big impact on it,'' Shi said. Originally slightly yellow when being excavated half a year ago, the canoe has now turned totally black. This January, a number of well-known artifact protection experts held a special seminar there. Many experts suggested to taking out the canoe, removing water from it and then putting it back. However, after they made an on-site-inspection, their attitude turned to the completely opposite, deciding that the canoe should not be moved and in fact be protected on the spot. "All their previous protection schemes were cancelled,'' said Shi. The protection work on the spot is tough, because it is closely related to the local environment, as well as the hydrological and environmental conditions in the area. So far, Xiaoshan officials have invited representatives from Hubei Museum, an authority on the protection of wooden artifacts, to work out a detailed protection plan. To protect the canoe from the sunshine, rain and wind, a large building with a blue cover and white walls have just been completed over it. A thermometer was placed right besides the canoe to monitor any temperature changes in the hall. Also, the medicinal liquid sprayed by the worker is intended to prevent the wood from cracking or warping. Shi believed that protecting the canoe on the spot would provide valuable chances for other experts and later generations to make further research. "Now we only have a limited knowledge about it,'' he said. In front of the canoe there were several stakes, believed to be hammered into the ground by ancient people and used to fix the canoes berthed at the lakeside. Beside the canoe there were many short oars, also covered by white cotton soaked with medicinal liquid. "It is not likely that there would be another canoe lying under the ground, because the site we have excavated is not the one buried intact, but one that is incomplete and partially destroyed,'' said Shi.
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