164 CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE NATIONAL HERBARIUM. 



visited the range but seems to have gathered no botanical specimens. 

 In 1881 Mr. G. R. Vasey visited the Organs. During the last twenty 

 years Prof. E. O. Wooton and others from the Agricultural College 

 have collected hundreds of plants in the mountains at all seasons of the 

 year, so that this range is better known botanically than any other 

 in the Territory. 



A ctinella vaseyi. Erigonum po lycladon cr ispum , 



Allium neomexicanum. Gomphrena caespitosa. 



Apocynum laurinum. Gutierrezia glomerella. 



Aquilegia chrysantha. Heuchera leptomeria. 



Artemisia microcephala. Laphamia cernua. 



Astragalus bigelovii. Lepidium intermedium. 



Astragalus tephrodes. Lotus mollis. 



Boerhaavia organensis. Martynia parviftora. 



Boerhaavia viscosa oligadena. Mimulus rubellus. 



Castilleja integra. Pentslemon linarioidcs. 



Castilleja organorum. Phlox spcciosa stanshuryi. 



Chaetochloa grisebachii ampla. Ptelea villosula. 



Chrysopsis fulcrata. Rhus trilobata mollis. 



Cir stum neomexicanum. Rosa stellata. 



Coleosanthus melissaefolius. Sedum wootonii. 



Coleosanthus wooloni. Selaginella rupincoai. 



Commelina crispa. Sicyos glaber. 



Delphinium wootoni. Verbena con finis. 

 Eriogonum aberlianum neomexiea- 



Pecos. Altitude, 2,100 meters. H4. 



The small Mexican village of Pecos is in western San Miguel 

 County on the Rio Pecos, a few miles above the crossing of the Santa 

 Fe Railroad. It is near the old Santa Fe Trail and is often mentioned 

 by travelers along that thoroughfare. About 2 miles to the south are 

 the ruins of the old pueblo of Pecos, one of the largest pueblos in the 

 southwest. Both Wislizenus and Fendler passed near here and col- 

 lected in the vicinity. Prof. T. D. A. Cockerell and the writer have 

 botanized here, the latter in the summer of 1908. The old pueblo 

 gave its name to the Pecos River, which has its source in the moun- 

 tains about 30 miles to the north. 



Corallorhiza grabhami. Rosa pecosensis. 



Orobanche xanthochroa. Rosa praetincta. 



Pecos Baldy. Altitude, 3,810 meters. H3. 



One of the highest peaks of the Territory, in the Pecos River 

 National Forest, probably in the extreme southeastern corner of Rio 

 Arriba County, although the boundaries of the several counties whose 

 corners meet here are not very definitely located. Mr. Vernon 

 Bailey, Mrs. W. H. Bartlett, and the writer have collected here. 

 (This is given on the map as Cone Peak.) 



Aconitum robertianum. Thalictrum cheilanthoides . 



) 



