350 HISTORY OF BRITISH FERNS. 
near York; Settle; Sheffield; Ingleborough ; and many 
other parts of Yorkshire. 
Tyne.— By the Tees above Middleton ; Rocks above Langley 
Ford ; Cawsey Dene, &c., Durham. Moors near Walling- 
ton; Shewing Shields ; Cheviot Hills; Hexham; Banks of 
the Irthing, Rev. R. Taylor, Northumberland. 
Lakes.— Wardale ; Borrowdale ; Ennerdale ; Sea w-Fell; Kes¬ 
wick ; Tindal Fell; Laggat, on Cold Fell, J. Robson, &c., 
Cumberland. Stockgill Force; Ambleside; Grasmere; 
Casterton Fell; Hutton Roof, &c., Westmoreland. Coni- 
stone, N. Lancashire. Isle of Man. 
W. Lowlands.— Drumlanrig ; Rae Hills ; Jardine Hall, Dum¬ 
fries, Dumfries-shire. Dalscairth ; Mabie, Kirkcudbright¬ 
shire, jP. Gray. Gourock, Renfrewshire. Falls of the 
Clyde, near Corra Linn ; Calderwood ; Crutherland; 
Campsie, near Glasgow, &c., Lanarkshire. 
E. Lowlands. — Berwickshire. Jedburgh; Ruberslaw, Rox¬ 
burghshire. Pentland Hills; Arniston; Rosslyn, and 
Auchindenny Woods, near Edinburgh. 
E. Highlands. — Ben Lomond, Stirlingshire, J. S. Henslow. 
Castle Campbell, near Dollar, Clackmannanshire, J. T. 
Syme, B.S.E. Dunfermline ; Inverkeithing ; Carden Den, 
Fifeshire. Kincardineshire. Glen Q,ueich in the Ochils; 
Bridge of Bracklin, near Callender; Dunkeld, A. Tait;; 
Ben Voirlich; Ben Lawers ; Craig Chailliach ; Killin ; 
Tyndrum; Dalnacardoch, &c., Perthshire. Canlochen, 
