Two strains of the same virus (isolates AR 168 and 7856), were isolated in 1981 from an apparently healthy cow and a sick sheep in TX, U.S.A. These isolates were shown to be members of the Bunyamwera serogroup (family Bunyaviridae, genus Bunyavirus) by complement-fixation tests. Serum dilution-plaque reduction neutralization test results indicated that the isolates are closely related to Cache Valley virus. The virus isolates were characterized by sensitivity to lipid solvent, size (50-100 nm by filtration and 70 nm by electron microscopy), heat (56 degrees C) and pH 3 lability, cytopathic effects or plaques in cultures of Vero, LLC-MK2, embryonic bovine testicle and PS cells, and pathogenicity for suckling and weaned mice by the intracranial but not the intraperitoneal route. Gnotobiotic and conventional sheep and goats were experimentally infected by inoculation with one of the isolates given either intravenously or intraperitoneally. Elevation of body temperature, depression, tremors, muscle spasms, disorientation, feeding anomalies, convulsions, or other signs of central nervous system disturbances were observed.