SOO HISTORY OF BRITISH FERNS 
E. Lowlands. — Berwickshire. Edinburghshire. Linlithgow- 
shire. 
E. Highlands. — Stirlingshire. Clackmannanshire. Fifeshire. 
Dunkeld (with var. having wedge-shaped pinnules, ap- 
proaching A, germanicumy and various other forms, A, 
Tait) ; and elsewhere, Perthshire. Forfarshire. Kincardine- 
shire. Aberdeenshire. Banffshire. Morayshire. Nairnshire. 
W. Highlands. — Argyleshire. Dumbartonshire. Ailsa Craig* 
Isles of Iona, Islay, and Cantyre. 
N. Highlands. — Cromarty. Sutherlandshire. Caithness. 
N. Isles. — Orkney. 
W. Isles. — N. Uist. Harris. Lewis. 
Ulster. — Rostrevor, Down, A» Crawford, 
Connaught. — Arran Isles. Connemara, Galway. 
Leinster. — Louth, C, L, Darhy, Dublin. King’s. Wicklow. 
Kilkenny. 
Munster. — Cork. Waterford, Tipperary. Limerick. Mucruss, 
Killarney, Kerry (furcate var.), Dr, Allchin, Clare, on 
limestone boulders ; also with narrow pinnules at Ennis, 
Dr, Allchin, 
Channel Isles. — Jersey. 
Asplenium septentrionale, Hull, 
Peninsula. — Near Culbone, N, Ward; near Oare church, 
Dev, W, S, Hore, Somersetshire. Wall on Exmoor, four 
miles from Porlock, B, J, Cray, 
Thames. — [Bocton Hill, Kent.] 
