STANDLEY— LOCALITIES OF PLANTS FROM NEW MEXICO. 157 



G-alisteo. Altitude, 1,820 meters. G4. 



A Mexican town on the Santa Fe Railroad in the south-central part 

 of Santa Fe County. Doctor Bigelow is the only botanist who ever 

 visited the place, passing by it in 1853. 



Abronia bigelovii. Eriogonum effusum nudicaule. 



Gallinas River. H4. 



A stream which rises in the southeastern part of the Pecos River 

 National Forest and flows past Las Vegas southeastward into the 

 Pecos River. Ribes leptanthum v'eganum was collected along its banks 

 by Professor Cockerell. 



Georgetown. Altitude, 1,940 meters. C9. 



A now abandoned mining camp in southwestern Grant County, near 

 Santa Rita. Dr. E. L. Greene collected here in the early eighties. 



Lithospemium viride. 



Gila River. B9. 



One of the more important streams of New Mexico, having its 

 source in the Gila National Forest in Socorro County. It is formed by 

 the union of three branches, the East, West, and Middle forks. It 

 flows through the northwestern part of Grant County and into Ari- 

 zona. Various botanists have collected in the region, Lieutenant 

 Emory being the first. Dr. E. L. Greene, Professor Wooton, and Mr. 

 O. B. Metcalfe have botanized along the stream and its branches. 



Androsaee glandulosa. Megarrhiza gilensis. 



Astragalus gilensis. Opuntia stanlyi. 



Delphinium scaposum. Pentstemon pauciflorus. 



Erigeron deustus. Senecio mogollonicus. 



Euphorbia neoinexicana. Senecio prionophyllus. 

 Hymenodea monogyra. 



Gilmores Ranch. Altitude, 2,220 meters. H8. 



A ranch in the White Mountains of Lincoln County near the post- 

 oflice of Alto, on Eagle Creek. Prof. E. O. Wooton made an extensive 

 collection here in 1897, and he and the writer collected two or three 

 hundred numbers here in 1907. Mr. A. B. Turner collected several 

 hundred plants at the same station in 1899. The plants that have 

 their type localities here will all be found listed for the White Moun- 

 tains. 



Gray. H8. 



A small settlement on or very near the present site of Capitan, in 

 Lincoln County. It was in what is called the "Salow" (Salado), 

 a wide, open "draw" or valley east of Carrizozo and north of Nogal, 

 that drains into the Bonito. It is about 4 miles from Fort Stanton. 



Argemone squamosa. Gutierrezia linearis. 



Coleosanthus nepetaefolius.. Ionoxalis caerulea. 



Gutierrezia juncea. Lesqucrella valida. 



