320 
HISTORY OF BRITISH FERNS. 
Ulster. — Near Belfast; Woodburn Glen; Rocks at Carrick- 
fergus (var. dmtata)^ Antrim. Black Mountain, Down. 
Connaught. — Leitrim, Connemara, Galway. Sligo, near the 
town. 
Munster. — Brandon Hill ; cliffs above Mangerton, Kerry. 
Cystopteris montana, Linh 
N. Wales. — Reputed to have been found in this province on 
Mount Glyder {Lloyd: Bay : Plukenet), 
E. Highlands. — Ben Lawers, W. Wilson^ and subsequently 
Dr. Balfour ; Corrach Dh’ Oufillach, or Corrach Uachdar 
in the Meal Oufillach Mountains, between Glen Dochart 
and Glen Lochy, W. Gourlie^ Perthshire. Clova, Forfar- 
shire, 1855, J. Backhouse. 
Gymnogramma leptophylla, Desmux. 
E. Highlands. — [In a stone dyke by the road from Braemar to 
Ballater, nearly opposite Invercauld House, Aberdeenshire, 
Miss Veitch. Probably an error, arising from the accidental 
intermixture of Scottish and Maderia specimens.] 
Channel Isles. — Jersey, on moist banks, among Marchantia ; 
near St. Aubyn’s ; St. Laurence and St. Haule. 
Hymenophyllum tunbridgense, Smith. 
Peninsula.— Rough Tor near Camelford ; near Penryn, Corn- 
