294 
HISTORY OF BRITISH FERNS. 
Ulster. —Antrim (an attenuated form), D. Moore. Down, 
(an attenuated form). 
Connaught. —Gort; Connemara, Galway. Arran Isles. 
Leinster. —Meath. Louth. Dublin. King’s. Wicklow. Kil¬ 
kenny. 
Munster.— Kerry. Cork. Ardmore (dichotomous), J. R. Kina- 
han. Waterford. Tipperary (an attenuated form). Clare. 
Limerick. Cork. 
Channel Isles. —Jersey. Guernsey (with an attenuated 
form) G. Jackson. 
Asplenium fontanum, R. Brown. 
Channel. —Near Petersfield, Hants, Rev. W. H. Hawker . 
Swanage Cave, Isle of Purbeck, Dorsetshire, Dr. Power 
( Phytol .) 
Thames. —Recently on an old garden-wall at Tooting, Surrey, 
D. Haigh. (The wall has been cleaned, and the plants 
destroyed.) 
ft. Wales. —Between Tan-y-Bwlch and Tremadoc, Carnarvon¬ 
shire, Dr. Power (Phytol .) 
Trent. —Matlock, Derbyshire, II. Shepherd. 
Humber. —York. 
Lakes. —[Formerly at Wybourn, Westmoreland ; or Wiborn, 
Cumberland.”] 
E. Highlands. —Shady rocks near Stonehaven, Kincardine¬ 
shire, D. Hutcheson. 
