



NOTE. 



The following publications relating to the botany of the Death Vallej 

 Expedition have already been issued: 



Descriptions of new plants from southern California, Nevada, Utah, and Arizona. 

 By Frederick Vernon Covillo. <Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washing- 

 ton, Vol. vn, pp. 65-80, May 18, 1892. 



The Panamint Indians of California. By Frederick Vernon Coville. <The 

 American Anthropologist, Vol. v, pp. 851-361, October, 1892. 



Sketch of the flora of Death Valley, California. By Frederick Vernon Coville. 

 <Science, Vol. xx, pp. 342, 343, December 16, 1892. 



Notes on the distribution of trees and shrubs in the deserts and desert ranges ol 

 southern California, southern Nevada, northwestern Arizona, and southwestern 

 Utah. By C. Hart Merriain. <North American Fauna, No, 7. pp. 285-343, May 31, 

 1893. 



Notes on the geographic and vertical distribution of Cactuses, Yuccas, and Agave, 

 in the deserts and desert ranges of southern California, southern Nevada, north- 

 western Arizona, and southwestern Utah. By C. Hart Merriam. ^North Aineri 

 can Fauna, No. 7, pp. 345-359, with Platos vu to xix, May 31, 1893. 



n 



