STANDLEY — LOCALITIES OF PLANTS FROM NEW MEXICO. 165 



Picacho Mountain. Altitude, 1,445 meters. E10. 



A low isolated peak on the west side of the Rio Grande, a short dis- 

 tance north of Las Cruces, Dona Ana County. Professors Wooton 

 and Cockerell have visited the peak. 



Sphaeralcea martii. 



Pinos Altos. Altitude, 2,055 meters. C9. 



A small town in the northeastern part of Grant County, northeast 

 of Silver City. Dr. E. L. Greene has collected extensively here and 

 in the surrounding country. 



Asclepias quinquedentata neomexicana, 



Pinos Altos Mountains. Altitude, 2,440 meters. C9. 



A range in the southern part of the Gila National Forest in northern 

 Grant County. Doctor Greene gathered many plants here in the 

 early eighties. 



Artemisia franserioides. Oldmlandia greenei. 



Cerastium fastigiatum . Phaseo lus parvulus. 



Draba pinetorum . Polcmonium filicinum. 



. Echinospermum pinetorum. Polemonium flavum. 



Habenaria brevifolia. Talinum eonfertiflorum. 



Hieracium carneum . Talinum humile . 



Linum neomexicanum, Tradescantia tuberosa. 



Poni Creek. I2 - 



In Colfax County between the Rayado and the south fork of the 

 Cimarron; visited by Fendler in 1847. 



Bidens tenuisecta. Franseria tenuifolia. 



Raton. Altitude, 1,810 meters. Jl. 



A town on the Santa Fe Railroad in northern Colfax County, not 

 far from the Colorado line. The Raton Mountains, rising to an ele- 

 vation of about 2,500 meters, are on the line between Colorado and 

 New Mexico, and unless the State in which plants from the range are 

 gathered is mentioned one can not tell whether they are from New 

 Mexico or Colorado. Lieutenant Abert and Mr. S. M. Tracy have 

 collected here. 



Actinella depressa pygmaea. Poa iraciji. 



Rio Blanco. C2 - 



A tributary of Canon Largo, in eastern San Juan County, visited 



by Doctor Newberry. 



Eriogonum lonchophyllum. 



Rio Grande. G2 > D8 - 



The principal stream of the southwest, flowing southward through 

 the central part of New Mexico. Its valley has always been an im- 

 portant thoroughfare and several botanists traveling through New 

 Mexico have collected along it. The following plants have been 



