ig°7~\ Chapel Hill Ferns and their Allies 
135 
Polypodium polypodioides (L.) A. S. Hitchcock. (P. 
incanum Sw.). Resurrection Fern. On shaded trunks of 
elms and occasionally on rocks; not rare. 
Pteridium aquilinum (L.) Kuhn. (Pteris aquilina L.) 
Bracken or Brake. In dry woods and sometimes in fields. 
Common. 
Adiantum pedatum L. Maiden-hair Fern. Found in 
three situations; in rich places near the foot of hills looking- 
north. 
Cheilanthes lanosa (Michx.) Watt. (C. vestita Sw.) 
Hairy Lip-fern. Found only on one rock on northern side of 
Morgan’s Creek near Scott’s Hole. 
Asplenium platyneuron (L.) Oaks. (A. ebeneum Ait.) 
Ebony Spleenwort. Common in woods and in niches of stone 
walls. 
Asplenium acrostichoides Sw. Silvery Spleenwort. 
Found only in two clumps near the base of Lone Pine Hill 
looking north. 
Asplenium Felix-foemina (L.) Bernh. Lady Fern. 
Very common along streams and in damp places. 
Woodwardia areolata (L.) Moore. Chain Fern. Found 
only in a marshy spot about one-half mile south-west of the 
University. 
Onoclea sensibilis L. Sensitive Fern. Scattered here 
f and there in wet places. 
Dryopteris acrostichoides (Michx.) Kuntze. Christ- 
mas Fern. Abundant along streams and on northern slopes 
of hills. 
Dryopteris Thelyteris (L.) A. Gray. Marsh Shield- 
fern. Found only in marsh north of Lone Pine Hill. 
Dryopteris Goldieana (Hook.) A. Gray. var. celsa. 
This fern was recently found near the northern foot of Lone 
Pine Hill. About eight specimens occurred scattered over a 
radius of seventy-five yards. It has not before been recorded 
for this State, It was described from Dismal Swamp by 
Palmer in the Proceedings of the Biological Society of Wash- 
ington, Volume XIII, page 65, 1899. Specimens have since 
