Localization of a approximately 66 kD glycosylated phosphoprotein during morphogenesis of the embryonic chick tibia has been accomplished using immunohistochemistry. Although initial expression of the tibial osteoblast phenotype is detected as early as stage 28.5, with the deposition of osteoid matrix beginning at stage 30, little or no immunoreactivity against the approximately 66 kD glycosylated phosphoprotein is observed in pre-osteoblasts, osteoblasts, osteocytes, or in the uncalcified osteoid matrix during the early events of tibia development. Immunoreactivity was first observed at stage 32 when mineralization of the osteoid matrix is initiated. At this and all later stages, the phosphoprotein is located almost exclusively in the extracellular matrix at the mineralization front with essentially no detectable staining in the adjacent unmineralized osteoid matrix. Similarly, no cellular staining is observed when even the lightly mineralized extracellular matrix is strongly immunoreactive. Only scant immunostaining is present over the heavily mineralized regions, although demineralization of these areas with EDTA exposes a low intensity, punctate staining pattern. Additionally, cryosections of developing calvaria stained with this antiserum only display reactivity in regions of bone matrix undergoing mineralization. These localization studies support the hypothesis that this phosphoprotein is intimately associated with the process of bone matrix mineralization in the developing chick long bone.