STANDLEY BIBLIOGRAPHY OF NEW MEXICAN BOTANY. 239 



Johnston, J. R. A revision of the genus Flaveria. Proc. Amer. Acad. 39: 279- 

 292. 1903. 



Contains references to New Mexican collections. 



Jones, Marcus E. Contributions to western botany. No. 3. Zoe 3: 283-309. 1893. 



Contains notes upon New Mexican specimens of Astragalus bigelovii. 

 — Contributions to western botany. No. 4. Zoe 4: 22-54. 1893. 



Contains references to New Mexican material. 



Contributions to western botany. No. 3. The Navajo Basin. Zoe 4: 



366-367. 1894. 



Part of the area treated is in New Mexico. 



Contributions to western botany. No. 8. 43 p. 1898. 



Two new species of Astragalus from New Mexico. 

 Land, W. J. G. Spermatogenesis and oogenesis in Ephedra trifurca. Rot. Gaz. 38: 

 1-18. pi. 1-5. 1904. 



The material upon which the work was based came from southern New Mexico. 



Iiiebmann, F. M. [Without title.] Overs. Dansk. Vidensk. Selsk. Forh. 1854: 

 170. 1854. 



Quercus fendleri described from New Mexico. 

 MacBride, T. II. The slime moulds of New Mexico. Proc. Iowa Acad. Sci. 12: 

 33-38. 1905. 



A list of species collected by the author in New Mexico. 



The Alamogordo desert. Science n. ser. 21: 90-97. 1905. 



A discussion of the botanical and geological features of the White Sands and the surrounding 

 country. 



MacDougal, I). T. See Coville, Frederick V. 



Mackenzie, K. K. Notes on Carex. II. Bull. Torrey Club 34: 151-155. 1907. 



Carex neomtxicana described from New Mexico. 



Notes on Carex. III. Bull. Torrey Club 34: 603-607. 1907 



A new species described from New Mexico. 



Mead, I. R. Study of the life of the tornillo zone. Thesis, New Mexico Agricul- 

 tural College. MS. in library N. Mex. Agr. Coll. 



Contains the results of observations upon the plants and insects of certain parts of the Mesilla 

 Valley. 



M earns, E. A . Mammals of the Mexican Boundary of the United States. A descrip- 

 tive catalogue of the species of mammals occurring in that region, with a general 

 summary of the natural history, and a list of trees. U. S. Nat. Mus. Bull. 56: 



1-530. 1907. 



Many of the trees listed are from New Mexican localities, some of them species not before reported 

 from the Territory. 

 Merrill, Elmer D. Arislida purpurea Nutt. and its allies. Y. S. Dep. Agr. Div. 

 Agrost. Circ. 34: 1-8. 1901. 



Numerous references to New Mexican specimens. 

 Metcalfe, O. B. The flora of the Mesilla Valley. Thesis for the degree of B. S., 

 New Mexico Agricultural College. MS. in library N. Mex. Agr. Coll. 



A discussion of the zones of plant life to be found in the region, together with a list of the plants 

 occurring in the vicinity. 



A study of the Atriplex and Larrea tension line in the Mesilla Valley, New 



Mexico. Thesis for the degree of M. S., New Mexico Agricultural College. MS. 

 in library N. Mex. Agr. Coll. 



An account of the results of efforts to explain the peculiar distribution of Covillea tridentata and 

 Atriplex cantscens in the Mesilla Valley. 

 Moseley, E. L. The cause of trembles and milk-sickness. Medical Record, May 15, 



1909. Reprint. 



Contains an account of the relation of Isocoma heterophylla to this disease, the material experimented 

 with having come from New Mexico. 



