[2] Jade: A Study in Chinese Archæology and Religion, Berthold Laufer (Field Museum of Natural History, Publication 154, Anthropological Series, Vol. X, Chicago, 1912, p. 23). [↑]

[3] Laufer notes that yu included nephrite, jadeite, bowenite, and sometimes “beautiful kinds of serpentine, agalmatolite, and marble”.—Jade, p. 22. [↑]

[4] Ibid., p. 29. [↑]

[5] De Groot, The Religious System of China, Book I, pp. 275 et seq. [↑]

[6] Jade, p. 299. [↑]

[7] The Religious System of China, Book I, pp. 274 et seq. [↑]

[8] Pronounced muk’ăra. [↑]

[9] See illustrations in Professor Elliot Smith’s The Evolution of the Dragon, pp. 88, 89. [↑]

[10] Like the ginseng (mandrake) in the Kang-ge mountains in northern Korea. (See [Chapter XVII].) [↑]

[11] De Groot, The Religious System of China, Book I, Vol. I, pp. 272–3. [↑]