plants which have been published by other workers (1), 
(2), (8), (4), (5), the writer presents the information em- 
bodied in the collection as a record of one of the early 
collections of plants from the Hopi region. The informa- 
tion not only broadens our knowledge of the uses of the 
plants by the Hopi in the 1890’s, but it also gives more 
comparative material for present and future workers 
interested in the ethnology and ethnobotany of these 
Indians. 
The Owens collection of plants under discussion in 
this paper is now deposited in the Herbarium of EKconom- 
ic Botany, Botanical Museum, Harvard University. The 
material has been re-identified and the present accepted 
names used. The enumeration of the material has been 
arranged in systematic order and wherever possible a 
common name has been given. In all cases, the authority 
for the botanical names is cited in full. In instances of 
double citation, the name-bringing synonym has been 
given. Synonomy is used where there has been a nomen- 
clatorial change. When the original determination of a 
plant has been found in error, the original identifications 
are given in parenthesis. The Hopi names and the uses 
made of the plants are those of the original collector, 
J.G.OQwens, and are taken directly from the herbarium 
sheets. 
PINACEAE 
(Pine Family) 
Juniperus utahensis (Engelmann) Lemmon in 
Calif. Board Forest. Rept. 3 (1890) 183. 
Juniperus californica Carriére var. utahensis Engel- 
mann in Trans. Acad. St. Louis 3 (1877) 588. 
Utah Juniper. 
(Originally identified as Juniperus occidentalis). 
Hoi-haq-bi. 
