400 Mr. Hardy on Lichens of the Eastern Borders, 



and Hedgehope. " About the Quarry on Sunnyside ; Murton Craigs, D ; 

 moors west of Belford." Thompson's Plants of Berwick, p. 109. " Lamberton 

 Moor, plentiful ; " " On the Lammermuirs not unfrequent." Dr. Johnston. 

 Coldingham Moor near Oldcambus Moss. 



2. C. GLAUCA, //. On mossy trees, stems of heather, and rocks. N. Com- 

 mon on the hills about "Wooler, and the lower Cheviots, top of Newton Tor, &c. 

 B. •' Below Marshall Meadows." J. V. Thompson. " Lamberton Moor." Dr. 

 Johnston. Cockburnlaw, Coldingham Moor, &c. 



0. FALLAx, Weber, In similar places with the preceding. 



3. C. SEPlNCOLA, EJtrh. Scarce. N. On rocks, House of Craig or Horsey 

 Crag, where there is a good deal of it ; wall of Whitsunbank Hill, one speci- 

 men ; Ford Woodhouse Hill, and Ford Hill. B. Old Scotch pines in Penman- 

 shiel Wood, and the Lower "Folly," and a scattered plant or two on stones 

 near Dowlaw Moss. In none of the systematic works is it said to grow on 

 stones, but Dr. Patrick Neill found it on the summit of the Wart Hill of Hoy, 

 1600 feet high (Scots Mag., 1805, p. 183) ; and Mr. Ralfs in Wales, «' on the 

 largest of the stones called the Giant's Pebbles by a small pool on the road from 

 Dolgelly to Tal-y-llyn." (Ann. and Mag. N. H. xiii. p. 263.) Mr. Dickson also 

 found it on stones. Hook. Brit. Fl. ii. p. 220. 



18. Spligeroplioron, Pers, 



1. S. coRALLOlDES, -P<rrj. On rocks among moss, and on trees along with the 

 \ar. FRAGILE, L. N. Cheviot and Hedgehope, top of Newton Tor, House of 

 Crag, Ford Hill, &c. B. " Below Marshall Meadows." J. V. Thompson. Cock- 

 burnlaw near the Retreat, Twinlaw Cairn, Bowshiel dean, Lowrey's Knowes 

 near Dowlaw, &c. D. " Murton Craigs." Dr. Johnston. 



2. S. COMPRESSUM, Ach. " Cheviot and Hedgehope," Winch, but I have 

 sought in vain for specimens. It is probably rare. The example marked S. 

 FRAGILE, in Dr. Johnston's Herbarium, belongs to this. The locality is not 

 given, but the reference is to the Ber. Flor. ii. 97. " The thallus is pale, of a 

 peculiar frosted, rigid, coralline aspect, compressed, the ultimate branches lobed 

 or articulated, terminating in a rounded or oblong swollen apex." Leighton's 

 British Angiocarpous Lichens, p. 9. 



19. Ifepliroina, Ach. 



1. N. L^viGATUBI, Ach. Among moss on rocks in shady deans, and by water- 

 sides, and also on the sea-banks. N. By Coldgate water from Langleyford to 

 Harthope Linn, Henhole, House of Crag, base of Horailheugh, &c. B. " Pen- 

 manshiel Wood ; wood above the Retreat." Dr. Johnston. Dowlaw dean, sea« 

 banks between Dowlaw and Redheugh, &c. 



20. Peltigera, Willd. 



1. P. APTHOSA, L. Among moss on rocks in damp shady localities, rare. 

 N. " Foot of Cheviot near Langleyford." J. V. Thompson, 1807. It grows at 

 Harthope Linn above the Hope, which is probably also Winch's locality. Near 

 a linn among rocks bordering Care-burn ; also at the mouth of Henhole dean. 

 B. " On rocks west from Longformacus Manse, sparingly." Rev. Thomas Brown. 

 " Near Abbey St. Bathan's." Dr. Johnston. 



