300 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. germanicum, and various other forms, A. 
Tali') ; 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. Darby. 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, 
Rev. W. 8. Hore , Somersetshire. Wall on Exmoor, four 
miles from Porlock, R. J. Gray. 
Thames. —[Bocton Hill, Kent.] 
