362 
HISTORY OF BRITISH FERNS. 
Humber.— -Yorkshire (with var. undwlatum) ; also Edlington, 
near Adwick (var. polyschides), J . Hardy ; magnesian lime¬ 
stone rocks, Doncaster (var. crispum), J. Hardy; Conin- 
brough Cliffs (fronds ramose and multifid), J. Hardy ; near 
Settle (many forms, including vars. crispum , supralineatum, 
and ramosum majus), A. Clapham. 
Tyne. — Northumberland. Durham ; also Sunderland (var. 
maltifidum ), J. Fairbridge 
Lakes. —Cumberland ; also a forked var. at Whitehaven. West¬ 
moreland. Isle of Man. 
W. Lowlands. —Drumlanrig, G. P. London ; banks of the Glen 
Water (with forked varieties), Dr. Lindsay , Dumfries-shire. 
Kirkcudbrightshire. Wigtonshire. Ayrshire. Renfrew¬ 
shire. Lanarkshire. 
E. Lowlands. —Edinburghshire. Berwickshire. 
E. Highlands. — Fifeshire. Forfarshire. Kincardineshire. 
Aberdeenshire. Nairnshire. Morayshire. 
W. Highlands. —Poltalloch, G. P. London , Argyleshire. Isles 
of Islay, Cantyre, and Skye. 
N. Highlands. —Sutherlandshire. 
N. Isles.— Isle of Ronsay, Orkney, rare, R. Heddell. Shet¬ 
land. 
Ulster.— Colin Glen, Belfast, Antrim (with vars. undulatum 
and multifidum), A. Crawford. 
Connaught.— Arran Isles. Connemara ; Gort, Galway. Sligo. 
Leinster. — Dublin. Townley Hall, Louth, C. L. Darby. 
