224 NATURAL HISTORY BULLETIN. 



Aspen. 7,874. W. W. Willard. 



Bailey's. 7,714. 



Beaver Brook. 6,391. Uhler. 



Beaver Creek. Flows into the Poudre. Gillette. 



Berkeley. Suburb of Denver. Oslar. 



Big Narrows of Poudre. 6,800. C. F. Baker. 



Boulder. 5,500. 



Breckenridge. 9,674. Wickham. July. 



Buena Vista. 7,925. Wickham. July. 



Canon City. 5,400. 



Canon of Big Blue. 8,500. Hayward and Bowditch. July. 



Cerro Summit. Above Montrose, on D. & R. G. R. R. 

 Gillette. 



Cheyenne Canon. 6,200. 



Chimney Gulch. 5,909. Oslar. 



Cimarron. 6,874. Gillette. 



Clear Creek Canon. Near Denver, 6,000-8,000. 



CochetopaPass. 10,000. Bowditch and Hay ward. August. 



Colorado Springs. 6,000. 



Cusack Ranch. In Wet Mountain Valley. 8,192. Cock- 

 erell. 



Delta. 4.950. Gillette. 



Dolores. Gillette. 



Dome Rock. 6,200. Snow. July. 



Durango. 5,500-7,000. 



Engelmann's Canon. 6,000-8,000. Snow. 



Estes Park. 8,600. The toll road runs between the. Park 

 and Lyons. 



Florence. 5,199- 



Florissant. 8,184. Bowditch. 



Fort Collins. 5,000. The collections from this vicinity 

 were made by Professor C. P. Gillette together with his col- 

 laborators or assistants, C. F. Baker, E.J. G. Titus, E. D. 

 Varney and Miss Emma A. Gillette. The same parties also 

 took the species recorded from the following points in the 

 same general neighborhood, at altitudes ranging from 5,000 

 to 6,000 feet. Dixon, Rist, Owl, Soldier's, Poudre and Spring 



