THE PLANTS OF THE GRAMPIANS. 61 
apply to the name of any one of the places, it seemed unne- 
cessary to repeat it each time. Besides these, some other 
localities are given in the tabular list, also without the addi- 
tion of figures, being localities of varying elevation, the exact 
heights of whose plants I am not able to state with precision ; 
some being high, some being low, but all within a certain 
range, the supposed medium height of which is shown in the 
following list of these places :— 
Bourd rocks, 3,000 feet, more or less. 
Clova table land, 2,700 feet, more or less. 
Callater rocks, ` 2,600 feet, more or less. 
Clova rocks, 2,400 feet, more or less. 
Clova lower rocks, 2,000 feet, more or less. 
Dalwhinnie, . 1,200 feet, or upwards. 
Castleton, 1,100 feet, or upwards. 
Dalnacardoch, 1,050 feet, or upwards. 
Glen Clova, 800 feet, or upwards. 
Pitmain, 150 feet, or upwards. 
Tayhead (Killin), 400 feet, or upwards. 
Lochearnhead, 350 feet, or upwards. 
lhave not named the last place, unless when the plant 
was seen also at some of the preceding places; and there are 
other plants about Loch-Earn, which I have not observed 
more completely among the mountains, and on that account 
have not added them to the list. Since by far the larger 
part of the plants whose names do appear in the list, may be 
found down to the sea level in some parts of Scotland, and a 
considerable portion are found on the low plains under nearly 
the same latitude as the Grampian mountains ; the inferior 
limits of those which do not descend so low can be more 
conveniently shown in a second list; which I reserve for a 
uture communication, the present one being quite as long 
as the space that can be spared for it in a miscellaneous 
Journal In a work which is now preparing for the press, I 
Shall treat much more amply on the relations of plants to 
