<Li> Chopsticks: The historian Sima Qian (145--86 BC) wrote in the Records of the Grand Historian that King Zhou of Shang was the first to make chopsticks out of ivory in the 11th century BC; the most ancient archaeological find of a pair of chopsticks, made of bronze, comes from Shang Tomb 1005 at Houjiazhuang, Anyang, dated roughly 1200 BC . By 600 BC, the use of chopsticks had spread to Yunnan (Dapona in Dali), and Töv Province by the 1st century . The earliest known textual reference to the use of chopsticks comes from the Han Feizi, a philosophical text written by Han Fei (c. 280--233 BC) in the 3rd century BC . </Li> <Li> Chromium, use of: The use of chromium was invented in China no later than 210 BC when the Terracotta Army was interred at a site not far from modern Xi'an; modern archaeologists discovered that bronze - tipped crossbow bolts at the site showed no sign of corrosion after more than 2,000 years, because they had been coated in chromium . Chromium was not used anywhere else until the experiments of French pharmacist and chemist Louis Nicolas Vauquelin (1763--1829) in 1797--1798 . </Li> <Li> Chuiwan: Chuiwan, a game similar to the Scottish - derived sport of golf, was first mentioned in China by Wei Tai (fl. 1050--1100) in his Dongxuan Records (東 軒 錄); it was popular amongst men and women in the Song Dynasty (960--1279) and Yuan Dynasty (1279--1368), while it was popular among urban men in the Ming Dynasty (1368--1644) in much the same way that tennis was for urban Europeans during the Renaissance (according to Andrew Leibs). In 1282, Ning Zhi published the Book of Chuiwan, which described the rules, equipment, and playing field of chuiwan, as well as included commentary of those who mastered its tactics . The game was played on flat and sloping grassland terrain and--much like the tee of modern golf--had a "base" area where the first of three strokes were played . </Li> <Li> Churn drill: Churn drills date back to as early as Qin Dynasty China, 221 BC, capable of reaching a depth of 1500 m . Churn drills in ancient China were built of wood and labour - intensive, but were able to go through solid rock . The churn drill appears in Europe during the 12th century . A churn drill using steam power, based on "the ancient Chinese method of lifting and dropping a rod tipped with a bit," was first built in 1835 by Isaac Singer in the United States . </Li>

Which of the following inventions originated in ancient china