
Luoyang Shovel: I Broadcast Live at the Archaeological Site
About This Novel
"History never stands still underground. It is always waiting for the most unlikely people to reactivate it in the most unexpected way." In 2015, a graduate student in the Department of Archeology with the online name "Luoyang Shovel" accidentally discovered the remains of a suspected Tang Dynasty shipwreck at a construction site in Xi'an. When he secretly turned on the live broadcast on his mobile phone, in the Dunhuang Scripture Cave 3,000 kilometers away, a line of mysterious coordinates suddenly appeared in a German explorer's diary that had been dusty for hundreds of years - completely coincident with his feet. This is not a tomb robbery novel, but the entire excavation process of the "Xi'an Tang Wharf Site" that actually happened and was listed as one of the "Top Ten New Archaeological Discoveries in China in 2016". From questioning in front of the mobile phone screen to the intervention of the national archaeological team, from the "Navy Army" siege to the national protection, a young archaeologist used a Luoyang shovel to not only dig out the largest water transport terminal in the prosperous Tang Dynasty, but also unearthed a civilized smuggling network across the Eurasian continent.
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