Pino Blanco (white pine), in Mariposa County.

Pino Grande (big pine), in El Dorado County, near Placerville.

Pinole (parched corn ground into meal). Point Pinole was so named because the expedition under Lieutenant Vallejo had nothing to eat but pinole while they waited at that spot for the return of the cargadores with provisions from Monterey.—(Memoirs of the Vallejos, edited by James H. Wilkins, San Francisco Bulletin, January, 1914.)

Piñón (pine kernel, also the scrub pine, a very picturesque tree bearing a delicious nut).

Point Pinos (point of pines). See page [148].

Tres Pinos (three pines). See page [163].

Pintado (painted, mottled).

Pinto Range (painted or mottled range). See page [332].

El Piojo (the louse), in Monterey County, a short distance south of Jolón.