148 CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE NATIONAL HERBARIUM. 



June 29. Through Apache Canyon. 



30. To Santa Fe. 

 July 1 to 8. At Santa Fe. 



8. Santa Fe to Agua Fria. 



9, 10, 11. To the placer mines and through the Sandia Mountains. 

 12. To Albuquerque. 



13 to 16. At Albuquerque. 



17. To Sandoval's hacienda, 



18. Along the Rio Grande Valley. 



19. To a camp opposite Isleta. 



20. To Alamos de Pinos and the "hacienda of Mariano Chavez's widow." 



21. Chavez to Peralta, Valencia, and Tome. 



22. To Casas Coloradas, 



23. Along the Rio Grande. 



24. Past Joyita. 



25. Joya (La Jolla) and along the Rio Grande. 



26. Through Sabino and near Pari da. 



27. Along the Rio Grande. 



28. Opposite Socorro to Lopez. 



29. Lopez to the upper end of the Jornada del Muerto. 



30. Past Valverde. 



31. Along the Jornada near the Rio Grande. 

 Aug. 1. Past Fray Cristobal (Jornada del Muerto). 



2. Past Laguna del Muerto and Ojo del Muerto. 



3. Past Alamos to Barilla (Jornada del Muerto). 



4. Along the Jornada del Muerto. 



5. From a camp on the river at Robledo to Dona Ana. 



6. Rio Grande Valley below Dona Ana. 



7. To the upper crossing of the Rio Grande. 



Routes of Charles Wright. 1851-1852. 



Charles Wright, at the suggestion of Dr. Asa Gray, visited the 

 southwest in 1S49 and in 1851-52 for the purpose of making botanical 

 collections. The following notes regarding his collections are taken 

 from a paper published by Prof. E. (). Wooton in the Bulletin of the 

 Torrey Botanical Club:° 



Practically all the plants of the 1849 collection were gathered in what is now the 

 State of Texas. Wright may have entered what is now New Mexico on the return 

 journey, between October 12 and October 20, but this is quite doubtful, since the 

 party apparently went down the river to San Elezario and then turned eastward. 



The plants obtained on the 1851 trip were mostly collected in New Mexico (about 

 Santa Rita), though all the time from September 2 to October 4 was spent on a trip 

 through southeastern Arizona and northeastern Sonora. 



Nearly all the plants collected in 1852 were obtained in Texas. He made a ten 

 days' trip to Lakes Gusman and Santa Maria in northern Chihuahua, and another 

 of four or five days to Fort Fillmore and the Organ Mountains, in southern New Mexico. 



A new difficulty arises here, since the specimens of the 1851 and 1852 collections 

 were sent out under the same printed label and it is not possible to tell which speci- 

 mens were collected each year. 



a Southwestern localities visited by Charles Wright. Bull. Torrey Club 33: 561-66 

 1906. 



