176 CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE NATIONAL HERBARIUM, 



Pinus edulis Engelm. in Wisliz. Mem. North. Mex. 88. 1848. 



"From the Cimarron to Santa Fe," Wislizenus in 1846. 



In his journal for June 22 Doctor Wislizenus says: "On Ocate Creek there are some 

 pines, the first we have seen close to the road." These may have been P. brachyptera, 

 but were probably P. edulis, for the latter occurs at lower levels and would be the 

 the first pine met with in most places. At any rate the tree was not found farther to 

 the north and east than this, and may have been collected around Santa Fe, where it 

 is exceedingly abundant on the lower hills. 



Pinus engelmanni Torr. Pac. R. Rep. 4: 141. 1856. 



Proposed as a new name for P. brachyptera because Doctor Torrey considered the 

 latter name inappropriate. 



JUNIPERACEAE. 



Juniperus megalocarpa Sud worth, Forestry & Irrigation 13: 307. 1907. 



"Approximately in section 11 or 14, township 9 south, range 20 west, of the Gila 

 National Forest, N. Mex. The location is midway between the towns of Alma and 

 Frisco, and about three miles above the 'Widow Kelley's Ranch,' on the San 

 Francisco River." Collected by W. R. Mattoon, September 22, 1906. 



Juniperus pach.yph.Ioea Torr. Pac. R. Rep. 4: 142. 1856. 

 "On the Zuni Mountains," Br. #. W. Woodhouse in 1852. 



EPHEDEACEAE. 



Ephedra trifurca Torr. m Emory, Mil. Recon. 152. 1848. 

 "Between the Del Norte and the Gila," Emory in 1847. 



POACEAE. 



Andropogon neomexicanus Nash, Bull. Torrey Club 25: 83. 1898. 

 "On the White Sands," August 26, 1897, E. 0. Wooton. 



Aristida fendleriana Steud. Syn. PI. Glum. 1: 420. 1855. 

 "New Mexico," Fendler 973 in 1847. 



Aristida longiseta Steud. Syn. PI. Glum. 1: 420. 1855. 



"New Mexico," Fendler 978 in 1847. 



One of the most abundant of the grasses about Santa Fe, on the mesas and in the 

 foothills. 



Aristida subuniflora Nash in Small, Fl. Southeast, U. S. 116. 1903. 

 "New Mexico," G. R. Vasey. 



Bouteloua pusilla Vasey; Scribn. Bull. Torrey Club 11: 6. 1884. 



=Bouteloua prostrata Lag. 



"New Mexico," G. R. Vasey. 



According to the label this was collected at "Kingman, New Mexico." So far as 

 I know there is no town of this name in New Mexico, but there is one in Arizona, and 

 the grass was collected in that Territory probably. 



Bromus porteri frondosus Shear, U. S. Dept. Agr. Div. Agrost. Bull. 23: 37. 1900. 

 "Mangas," J. G. Smith. 



Calycodon montanum Nutt. Journ. Acad. Phila. n.ser. 1: 186. 1848. 

 = Muhlcnbergia gracilis Trin. 

 "In the Rocky Mountains near Santa Fe," William Gambel. 



