HARRixuTON] PLACE-NAMES 553 



(1) Nagel Mountain, so called because of the ranch of Mr. Nagol at 

 its foot. 



(2) Sunmount Mountain, so called because of the situation of 

 Sunmount Sanatorium near its foot. 

 This is a hif^h mountain about two miles southeast of Santa Fe 

 [29:6] and immediately east of the ranch of Mr. Nagel. 



Ocher deposits at San Pedro [29:77]. "At San Pedro, Santa Fe 

 County, are deposits of ochre, or mineral paint".' The Indian 

 informants have not mentioned these deposits. 



Tano Tewa (?) "Ojana", etc. This name is unknown to our Tewa 

 informants, who can think of no Tewa word or expression that 

 resembles it at all closely in sound. Nqlcanq would mean ' there 

 isaforest' {ml 'it'; Tea 'forest'; nq, 'to be situated'). The writer 

 thought it might be for Keresan A'ahdnu 'people of A' a [29:un- 

 located] {lahiu people), but this is only conjectural. "Ojana".^ 

 "0-ja-na".^ "0-jan-a".* "Okana".'^ See excerpt from Bande- 

 lier under Tano Tewa '' Kipana,'-' etc., page 550. 

 See Kipana [29:unlocated], page 550. 



"Oldlsleta".'' 



Old Isleta, the one abandoned after 1681, stood very near the site of the 

 present village, on a delta or island between the bed of a mountain torrent and 

 the Rio Grande, from which comes its Spanish name. I am not informed 

 whether any remains of this pueblo are yet to be seen." 



See Isleta Pueblo [29:101]. 



(1) Eng. Pecos settlement. (<Span.). =Span. (i!). 



(2) Span. Pecos, named from Pecos Pueblo ruin [29:0:!]. This 

 is a small and comparatively recent settlement situated a couple 

 of miles northward from Pecos Pueblo ruin [29:33], from which 

 it takes its name. 



Petrified forest somewhere south of Cerrillos [29:53]. Mr. C. L. 

 Linney, of Santa Fe, described this locality to the writer as one 

 abounding in masses of silicified wood similar to that of the 

 famous Petrified Forest National Monument of Arizona. 



Pictographs 3 miles east of Cerrillos [29:53]. Mr. H. C. Yontz, of 

 Santa Fe, informs the writer that there are aboriginal paintings 

 on a cliff facing the railroad about 3 miles east of Cerrillos [29:53]. 



Placer Mountains. This is apparently a name applied to the Ortiz 

 [29:72], Golden [29:73], and South [29:74] mountains together, 

 because placer gold mining has been carried on in them.' On 



' Land of Sunshine, a Book of Resources of New Mexico, p. Ill, 190U. 



2 0nate (1598) in Doc. Intd., xvi, p, 114, 1871; Bandelicr, Final Report, p. ii, p. 122, 1892. 



3 Ibid., pt. I, p. 125, 1890. 

 < Ibid., pt. II., p. 109. 



'■' Hewett, Commiinaut(^.^, p. 38, 1908 \k by misprint for // forBandelier'sj'fi. 

 6 Bandelicr, op. cit., p. 234. 



' See, for example, U. S. Geogr. Surveys West of tlie 100th Meridian. Part of Central New Mex., 

 atlas sheet No. 77, Exped. of 1873, '74, '75, '76, 77, and '78. 



