Originally, Song periodicals were written in bold type, with ten lines in half a page and two crosses between lines, but they have already been spread all over the world. In the tenth year of Hongzhi in Ming Dynasty (1497), Xie Duo, a county native, reprinted the book when compiling the New Records of Chicheng. Now the whole book is in Beijing Library and Nanjing Institute of Geography of China Academy of Sciences. Nanjing Library and Taiwan Province Central Library have remnant volumes. In the 24th year of Wanli (1596), Taizhou magistrate was revised and reprinted. Beijing Library and Nanjing Library have collections, while Shanghai Library has remnants. In addition, the Cabinet Library of the Japanese National Assembly Library will have a supplementary edition from tomorrow (1626). When compiling Si Ku Quan Shu, according to Ma's collection of manuscripts of Huai River and Huai River. At present, the popular book in the society is the second edition of Taizhou series, which was reprinted in the twenty-third year of Qing Jiaqing (18 18). When Song Shizhen reprinted this book, it was difficult to see all the books published in the Ming Dynasty. In Linhai, only Hong and Guo have copies. Their two families copied each other's works. Song borrowed two schools, which were collated and engraved for the world. There are twelve pictures in the Song edition of this book, and there are only nine pictures missing from the Song edition. Taizhou local chronicles have a long history and fine traditions. As early as the Three Kingdoms period, the Annals of Coastal Waters was published, and the Annals of Coastal Waters compiled by Liu Song in the Southern Dynasties was also a precious embryonic local chronicle. In the Song Dynasty, the compilation of local chronicles was mature, and Chen Qiqing and others completed this famous chronicle in the heyday of this compilation.