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, R. Kyle. 
Munster. —Brandon Hill, Kerry. 
Pteris aquilina, Linnwus. 
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, Rev. J. M. Chanter ; and in Guernsey, C. Jackson. 
Scolopendrimn vulgare, Symons. 
Peninsula. —Cornwall. Bideford (lobate form), Devonshire. 
St. Decuman’s (var. fissum), Sir W. C. Trevelyan ; Nettle- 
