326 
HISTORY OF BRITISH FERNS. 
ter ; Ilfracombe (various forms, including nana ), Rev. J. M. 
Chanter, &c., Devonshire. Inglishcombe Wood ; Selworthy, 
Somersetshire. 
Channel.— Hampshire. Ninham, near Ryde, Isle of Wight. 
Dorsetshire. Spye Park, Wiltshire. Tilgate Forest; Hast¬ 
ings; Tunbridge Wells (with a dwarf var.), Sussex. 
Thames. —Hertford Heath; Broxbourne ; Aldenham ; Hitchin, 
&c., Hertfordshire. Eridge Rocks, Kent. Chertsey; Bag- 
shot ; Virginia Water, and other parts of Surrey. Hamp¬ 
stead (with a glandular, a dwarf, and an obtuse-pinnuled 
var.), Middlesex. Epping (with var. glandulosa, If. Double¬ 
day'), Essex. Chipping Norton, Oxfordshire, H. Buckley. 
Ouse. —Norwich, Norfolk. Cambridgeshire. Northamptonshire. 
Severn. —Stoke Heath ; Stinchall; Whitley, and other parts of 
Warwickshire. Dean Forest (var. glandulosa ), Messrs. Ben¬ 
nett and Purchas, Gloucestershire. Pen-y-garn and Trev- 
ddun, Monmouthshire, T. H. Thomas. Howie Hill, Ross; 
Colwall, Herefordshire. Worcestershire. Staffordshire. 
Titterstone Glee (with a glandular form) ; Sandford Heath; 
HawkestOne; Bomere; Sutton Spa, and Shomere, near 
Shrewbury; Pimhill; Shawbury Heath, Rev. TV. A. Leigh¬ 
ton ; Whitchurch, R. TV. Rawson , Shropshire. 
S. Wales. —Brecknock Beacon ; Drygarn (dwarf form), J. R. 
Cobb , Brecknockshire. Gamrhin, above Rhayader (var. du- 
metorum ), J. R. Cobb , Radnorshire. Glamorganshire. Car¬ 
diganshire. Pembrokeshire. 
