34)4! HISTORY OF BRITISH FERNS. 



near Liverpool ; Chat Moss ; Woolston Moss, and else- 

 where, near Warrington ; Pouiton-le-Sand, Lancashire. 



HcMBER. — Pottery Carr, near Doncaster ; Leeds ; Askham 

 Bog ; Whitby ; York, and other parts of Yorlcshire. 



Ttne. — Durham. Chivington Woods, Rev. B. Taylor, Nor- 

 thumberland. 



Lakes. — Windermere, T.Ri/Iands,B.S.L,; Colwith,^, FordJiam, 

 B.S.L., Westmoreland. Sea Scale, Gosforth, J. Robson, 

 Cumberland. Isle of ]\Ian. 



W. Lowlands. — Lochar Moss, Dumfries-shire, W. G. Johnstone. 

 By the Manse, or White Loch, and below the Cliffs, Colvend, 

 Kirkcudbrightshire, P. Gray. By the Clyde, Lanarkshire. 



E. Highlands. — Stirlingshire. Fifeshire. Kincardineshire. 

 Culross ; by Loch Tay, C. M'-Intosh, Perthshire. Arbroath, 

 G. Lawson ; Montrose ; Kinnaird, &c., Forfarshire. Mill 

 of Leys, G. Dickie, B.S.E., and elsewhere, Aberdeenshire. 



W, Highlands. — Glen Finnart ; Dunoon ; Loch Fine, N.E. of 

 Inverary, Argyleshire. By Loch Lomond, Dumbartonshire. 

 Isles of Arran, Bute, Mull, and Islay. 



N. Highlands. — InchnedamfF, Sutherlandshire. Ross-shire. 



N. Isles. — Shetland. 



W. Isles. — N. Uist. Harris. Lewis. 



CoNNAUGiiT. — Abundant in Connemara ; Oughterard ; Bog 

 near Lough Coota, J. R. Kinalian, Galway. Achill Island. 

 Castlebar ; Mayo. 



Leinster. — Kelly's Glen, co. Dublin, 



