@article{oai:nagoya.repo.nii.ac.jp:00003873, author = {松原, 輝男 and MATSUBARA, Teruo}, journal = {情報文化研究}, month = {Mar}, note = {Since the first formal document about trees in the Tokugawa forest in Shinsyu Ohkawara village was offered to the Tokugawa Shogunate in 1724 by the village officials, the same kind of documents were offered many times afterwards till the end of the Edo period. As a consequence of several large scale deforestations and other reasons such as erosion and tree-withering, many timber trees were lost from the forest. Then the village officials offered a new document about trees in 1766. The original form of the new document was a precise record of trees in each smaller-division of the forest. The finance ministry (Kanjo-bugyo-sho) of the Tokugawa Shogunate, which had some doubts about the document, investigated the village officials and the state of the forest for about 4 years. This paper describes the state of the forest in the 1760s shown by the documents of that period, and recounts the course of the investigations.}, pages = {11--44}, title = {信州大河原・鹿塩両村御榑木山の近世における林相 その2:明和三年の大河原山立木数報告始末}, volume = {7}, year = {1998} }