378 
HISTORY OF BRITISH FERNS. 
Tyne. —Falcon Clints, and elsewhere in Teesdale, Durham, 
S.E. of Crag Lake; Cheviot, Northumberland. 
Lakes. —Kirkston, and other parts of Westmoreland. Great 
Gable ; Ennerdale ; Wastwater, and other parts of Cumber¬ 
land. Conistone, N. Lancashire. 
W. Lowlands. —Hills west of the Vale of Dumfries. Hills 
above Dalscairth, Kirkcudbrightshire. Renfrewshire. La¬ 
narkshire. 
E. Lowlands. —Roxburghshire. Lammermuirs ; Lamberton 
Moor, Berwickshire. Pentland Hills, Edinburgh. 
E. Highlands. —Clackmannanshire. Kinross-shire. Fifeshire. 
Ben Lawers; Blair Athol; Kill in ; Ben Yoirlich, &e., 
Perthshire. Sidlaw Hills ; Glen Dole and Glen Fiadh, 
Clova, &c., Forfarshire. Bay of Nigg, Kincardineshire. 
Invercauld, &c., Aberdeenshire (3,600 feet). Badenoch, 
Morayshire* Banffshire. Nairnshire. 
W. Highlands. —Freuch Corrie, Strath Affarie; Ben Nevis 
(3,450 feet), &c., W. Inverness-shire. Ben More ; Tober¬ 
mory, Isle of Mull; and other islands of the Inner He¬ 
brides. 
N. Highlands. —Ross-shire. Ben Hope (3,000 feet), Sutherland. 
Morven, Caithness, T. Anderson. 
N. Isles. —Hoy, Orkney, common, T. Anderson. Unst, Shet¬ 
land. 
W. Isles. —Langa, Harris, Dr. Balfour. 
