386 
HISTORY OF BRITISH FERNS. 
W. Lowlands.- —Dumfries-shire. Kirkcudbrightshire. Rother- 
glen, Lanarkshire. 
E. Lowlands.— Pentland Hills; Braid Hill Marshes, Edin¬ 
burghshire. 
E. Highlands.— Perthshire. Slateford ; Monroman Moor ; 
Alyth ; near Forfar, and other parts of Forfarshire. Loch 
of Drum, Kincardineshire. Morayshire. 
W. Highlands. —Loch Lomond, Dumbartonshire. 
N. Highlands. —Sutherlandshire. 
Ulster. —By the Blackwater, near Lough Neagh; by the Bann, 
below Jackson’s Hall, Coleraine, Antrim. 
Connaught. —Ballinahineh ; Connemara, Galway. 
Selaginella spinosa. 
Peninsula.— [Devonshire.] 
N. Wales. —Aberffraw, Anglesea. Denbighshire. Cwm-Idwal; 
Clogwyn-du-Yrarddu ; Glyder-Vawr ; Llanberis ; Capel 
Curig, Carnarvonshire. 
T rent .—Kinderscout, Derbyshire. 
Mersey. —New Brighton, Cheshire. Near Southport; Seaforth 
Common, Bootle, Lancashire. 
Humber. —Cronckley Fell; Stockton Forest; Settle ; Rich¬ 
mond ; York ; Knaresborough; Whitsuncliffe, near Thirsk, 
&c., Yorkshire. 
