[7] Once in Saint Petersburg, it was first transferred to the Ministry of Finance and then to the Academy of Sciences and embedded in the wall in the entrance hall of the Asiatic Museum.
In 1936, it was transferred to the Hermitage, to this day occupying a central place in the permanent exhibition of the Mongolian Art Hall in the third floor of the museum.
A volumetric model of the stele was created in 2017 by the Hermitage's Laboratory for Science Restoration of Precious Metals, so that an exact polymer replica could be grown layer-by-layer.
According to Igor de Rachewiltz (2010), the inscription reads (with letters in parentheses being unclear): Činggis Qaɣan-i Sartaɣul irge dauliju baɣuju qamuɣ Mongɣol ulus-un (n)oyad-i Buqa Sočiɣai quriɣsan-dur Yisüngge o(j)unudur-un ɣurban jaɣud ɣučin tabun aldas- tur o(n)duu(n)laɣ-a.
[7] When Genghis Khan, having subjugated the Sartaɣul people set up camp and the noblemen of the entire Mongol nation had gathered at Buqa Sočiɣai, Yisüngge shot an arrow a distance of 335 alds.