The Yujiashan Archaeological Museum has redefined cultural engagement this year through its groundbreaking exhibition of Liangzhu artifacts, blending ancient history with cutting-edge technology. Visitors in 2026 can now observe 5,000-year-old jade carvings and ceremonial objects under precision lighting systems that magnify intricate patterns invisible to the naked eye.
New interactive touchscreens enable guests to digitally explore artifact origins while physical displays guide them to corresponding items within glass cases. This dual-layer approach reveals how Liangzhu craftspeople achieved geometric precision without modern tools, offering fresh insights into one of China's earliest urban civilizations.
Museum director Li Wei told KhabarAsia.com: "Our 2026 upgrades make the Liangzhu culture's technological sophistication tangible. The lighting angles mirror ancient workshop conditions, while digital interfaces bridge millennia of human innovation." The enhancements come as Chinese museums increasingly employ immersive tech to contextualize archaeological finds for global audiences.
Reference(s):
cgtn.com







