FLORAS OF THE WORLD 199 



Standley, P. C. The type localities of plants first described from New Mexico. 

 Contrib. U. S. Natl. Herb. 13: 143-227. pi. 21, map. 1910. 



Itineraries of Wislizenus, Wright, Whipple's expedition (Bigelow), Pope's ex- 

 pedition, Parke's expedition ; descriptive list of type localities, with lists of 

 species ; annotated systematic list of species described from New Mexico. 



Wooton, E. O. Native ornamental plants of New Mexico. Bui. New Mexico 

 Agr. Expt. Sta. 51. 40 p. plates. 1904. 



Running account of native plants of possible ornamental value. 



Trees and shrubs of New Mexico. Bui. New Mexico Agr. Expt. Sta. 



87. 159 p. illus. 1913. 



Annotated treatment, with keys. 



and Standley, P. C. Flora of New Mexico. Contrib. U. S. Natl. Herb. 



v. 19. 794 p. 1915. 



Annotated list of 2,903 species of vascular plants, with keys ; gazetteer. 



Local 



Castetter, E. F., and Opler, M. E. The ethnobiology of the Chiricahua and 

 Mescalero Apache. A. The use of plants for foods, beverages and narcotics. 

 Univ. New Mexico Bui. 297 (Biol. Ser. v. 4, no. 5). 63 p. 1936. (Ethno- 

 biological studies in the American southwest III. ) 



Includes running account of plants used by these Indians in New Mexico and 

 adjacent regions. The Mescalero lived mainly in New Mexico, west to the Rio 

 Grande, east to northwestern Texas, south into northern Mexico ; the Chiricahua 

 west of the Rio Grande into southeastern Arizona and south into Chihuahua and 

 Sonora. 



Emerson, F. W. An ecological reconnaissance in the White Sands, New 

 Mexico. Ecology 16: 226-233. 4 fig. ( inch map). 1935. 



Includes list of 62 known vascular plants ; bibliography. The area, occupying 

 about 270 square miles, is covered with dunes composed of loose crystals of 

 gypsum. (Otero County.) 



Robbins, W. W., Harrington, J. P., and Freire-Marreco, Barbara. Ethno- 

 botany of the Tewa Indians. Bui. Bur. Amer. Ethnol. 55. xii, 124 p. 7 fig., 

 8 pi., map. 1916. 



Tewa classification and nomenclature of plants; glossary of Tewa names for 

 plant organs, etc. ; annnotated list of wild and cultivated plants, with Tewa 

 names and uses ; bibliography. The Tewa are a tribe in the upper Rio Grande 

 Valley, New Mexico. 



Standley, P. C. Notes on the flora of the Pecos River National Forest. Muhlen- 

 bergia 5: 17-30. 1909. 



Topography, botanical explorations, general features of flora ; list of more inter- 

 esting plants collected by the author in 1908, with localities. The Pecos River 

 National Forest, now a part of the Santa Fe National Forest, was in San Miguel, 

 Mora, and Santa Fe Counties. 



Stevenson, M. C. Ethnobotany of the Zuni Indians. Ann. Rpt. Bur. Amer. 

 Ethnol. 30: 31-102. 3 pi. 1915. 



Annotated lists of useful plants, classified by uses, with vernacular names. 

 The Zuni Indian Reservation is in western McKinley and Valencia Counties. 



Watson, J. R. Manual of the more common flowering plants growing without 

 cultivation in Bernalillo County, New Mexico. Univ. New Mexico Bui. 49 (Biol. 

 Ser. v. 3, no. 1). xii, 107 p. 1908. 



Annotated flora with keys and brief descriptions; the grasses and sedges 

 omitted. 



NEW YORK 



General 



Brown, H. P. Trees of New York State, native and naturalized. Tech. Pub. 

 New York State Col. Forestry 15. 401 p. illus., map. 1922. 



Description and full-page illustration of each species; keys; life zones. The 

 "glossary of derivations" is a remarkable production. Revised and enlarged edi- 

 tion issued as Trees of northeastern United States, native and naturalized. 

 490 p. illus. 24 cm. Boston, 1938. 



