360 
HISTORY OF BRITISH FERNS. 
Dole, &c., in the Clova Mountains, Forfarshire. Aberdeen- 
shire. Morayshire. 
W. Highlands. — Mountains near Loch Erricht, Inverness- 
shire. Ben More, Isle of Mull. 
N. Highlands. — Raven Rock, near Castle Leod, Ross-shire. 
Ben Hope, B,S,E, ; Assynt, Sutherlandshire. 
N. Isles. — Hoy-hill, Orkney (1,600 feet), very rare, T, An- 
derson. 
Ulster. — Glen E. of Lough Eske; Rosses and Thanet Moun- 
tain passes, Donegal. 
Connaught. — Glenade Mountains, Leitrim. Ben Bulben, Sligo. 
Leinster. — Navan, Meath, B. Kyle. 
Munster. — Brandon Hill, Kerry. 
Pteris aquilina, Linnaeus. 
The most common of our Ferns, disposed over the whole of 
England, Wales, Scotland, and Ireland ; ascending to an eleva- 
tion of nearly 2,000 feet. It is also found in Shetland, in the 
Orkneys, in the Hebridean Islands of N. Uist, Harris, and Lewis, 
and in the Channel Isles. 
A multifid variety is found near Chiselhurst, G. B. Wollaston; 
in Devonshire, Bev. J. M. Chanter ; and in Guernsey, C. Jackson. 
Scolopendrium vulgare, Symons. 
Peninsula. — Cornwall. Bideford (lobate form), Devonshire. 
St. Decuman’s (var. fissum), Sir W. C. Trevelyan ; Nettle- 
