372 HISTORY OF BRITISH FERNS. 



Den of Airl}'', below Reeky Lyn, G. Lawson ; Canlochen, 

 Glen Isla ; by the Caledonian Canal, near Forfar, Forfar- 

 shire. Aberdeenshire. Banffshire. Morayshire. 

 Ulster. — Mountain glens of Antrim ; as at Wolf hill, and Glen- 

 doon, near Cushendall. 



Equisetuin ramosum, ScJileiclier. 



E. Highlands. — Den of Airly, Forfarshire. Banks of the Dee, 

 Aberdeen and Kincardineshire. 



Ulster.— Colin Glen, Belfast; "The Glens;" Calton Glen, 

 Antrim. Ballyharrigan Glen, Londonderr3% 



Equisetum sylvaticum, Linnccus. 



Peninsula. — Devonshire. Somersetshire. 



Channel. — Parsonage Lynch, Newchurch ; Apse Heath, Isle 

 of Wight. Dorsetshire. Wiltshire. Sussex. 



Thames. — Bell Wood and Bayford Wood, Hertfordshire. 

 Highgate, Middlesex. Kent. Burgate, Godalniing, Surrey. 

 Bagley Wood, Berkshire. High Beech, Essex. 



OusE. — Suffolk. Norfolk. Chesterton ; Madingley Wood, Cam- 

 bridgeshire. Bedfordshire. Northamptonshire. 



Severn. — Ai'bury ; Mosely Bog, near Birmingham, Warwick- 

 shire. Gloucestershire. Herefordshire. Worcestershire. 

 Staffordshire. Benthal Edge, Shropshire. 



S. Wales. -Hafod, and about the Devil's Bridge, Cardigan- 



