156 CONTRIBUTIONS PBOM THE NATIONAL HEKBAKIUM. 



Florida Mountains. Altitude, 2,190 meters. Dll. 



A small, narrow range of steep peaks in the central part of Luna 

 County southeast of Deming. Dr. C. L. Herrick of the University 

 of New Mexico collected here in the late nineties and Mr. E. A. Gold- 

 man of the Biological Survey in the autumn of 1908. 



Gutierrezia goldmanii. 



Fort Bayard. Altitude, 1,850 meters. C9. 



Formerly a military post, now maintained by the Government as 

 a sanitarium for tuberculosis patients, in the eastern part of Grant 

 County between Silver City and Santa Kita. Dr. E. L. Greene 

 botanized in the region in the early eighties, and Mr. J. C. Blumer 

 made a small collection of plants here a few years ago. 

 Ptelea subvestita. 



Fort Wingate. Altitude, 2,000 meters. B4. 



The only military post now occupied in New Mexico, in McKinley 

 County a few miles southeast of Gallup. Dr. W. Matthews, a sur- 

 geon connected with the post, collected here in 1882. 



Astragalus matthewsii. Astragalus wingatanus. 



Astragalus procumbens . 



Fray Cristobal. E8. 



According to Doctor Wislizenus, who passed by here in 1846, this 

 was a name of rather loose application given to a place on the east 

 side of the Rio Grande in southeastern Socorro or northeastern Sierra 

 County, about 40 miles below the town of Socorro. It was the last 

 camp before starting across the Jornada del Muerto. There is a 

 peak of this name just east of the river in the extreme northeastern 

 corner of Sierra County, and it is probably the peak rather than the 

 surrounding country to which the name really was applied. 



Dithyraea wislizeni. Larrea glutinosa. 



Fresnal. Altitude, 1,950 meters. G9. 



A post-office in the Sacramento Mountains, in the north-central part 



of Otero County, between Ilighrolls and Tobogan. It is now known 



as Wootens. Prof. E. O. Wooton has collected here at various times. 



Ribes mescalerium. 



Frisco. Altitude, 1,670 meters. A8. 



A small settlement in the western part of Sierra County, in the Gila 

 National Forest, on the San Francisco or, as it is more commonly 

 called, the Frisco River. Professor Wooton has botanized here and 

 in the surrounding region. 



Juniperus megalocarpa. Sphaeralrea laxa. 



