STANDLEY LOCALITIES OF PLANTS FROM NEW MEXICO. 163 



Kutt. Altitude, 1,410 meters. D10. 



A station on the Santa Fe Railroad in the extreme northeastern 

 corner of Lima County. Mr. O. B. Metcalfe visited the locality in 

 the spring of 1905. 



Phacelia similis. 



Ocate Creek. 13. 



A small stream in the northern part of Mora County, visited by 

 Wislizenus and Fendler. 



Aster fendleri. 



Ojo Caliente. A5. 



A small settlement on the Zuni Reservation in the extreme north- 

 western corner of Valencia County. Ojo Caliente is Spanish for 

 Hot Spring, and there are many such springs in New Mexico known 

 by this name. The one near Zuni is the one referred to in the present 

 paper. Professor Wooton seems to be the only botanist who has 

 collected here. 



Trtpterocalyx wootonii. 



Ojo de Gavilan. All. 



Or Hawk Spring, in central Grant County, visited by Wright in 



1851. 



Anoda pentasdiisla. Machaeranthera tanacetifolia humilis. 



Ojo del Muerto. E9 - 



Wislizenus speaks of this as a place upon the Jornada del Muerto 

 where water was sometimes found. He collected here the type of 

 Splmeralcea incana disseda. 



Ojo de Vaca. Altitude, 1,500 meters. CIO. 



Or Cow Spring, in the extreme northwestern corner of Luna 

 County, visited by Wright in 1851. 

 Astragalus vaccarum. 



011a. 



Formerly a Mexican settlement somewhere near the upper end of 

 the Jornada del Muerto. Wislizenus uses the locality on some of his 

 labels. This, like more than one of the place names used by Wislizenus 

 on his labels, is not mentioned in his journal. 



Larrea glutinosa. 



Organ Mountains. Altitude, 2,695 meters. F10. 



A small range of jagged peaks, running north and south in the 

 southern part of Dona Ana County, about 13 miles east of the Rio 

 Grande. The range contains the steepest and roughest peaks to be 

 found in New Mexico. Both Bigelow and Wright collected here, but 

 they apparently obtained only a few plants. Parke's expedition 



