44, COMPOSITE. 535 
Anthemis (arvensis) anglica, Spreng. A. maritima, Sm. 
Province - 11. Durham; Robson, Backhouse. 
Syn. 668. Oyb. ii. 129. [By misnomers, in 2- 6-11 - 18 - 15.] 
Anthemis tinctoria, Linn. 
Provinces- 3-11 15. Sur. Ess. Dur. North. Fife. Forf. 
Casual. Cyb. ii. 181. iii. 463. Journal of Botany, iv. 150. 
(Winch enumerates also the Anthemis Valentina, tomentosa, and 
miata among “ Exotics found on the ballast-hills of Tyne and 
Wear ;” Geog. dist. 38. It would needlessly extend this List if 
all the plants ever seen on the ballast in Tyne province should be 
included in it.) 
Achillea decolorans, Schrad. A. serrata, Sm. 
Provinces 1-8-10. Somerset. Derby. York. 
Extinct Casual? Cyb. ii. 182. Garden examples only ? 
Achillea tomentosa, Linn. 
Provinces -10--13-15 16. York. Renf. Banff. Dumb. 
Casual. Cyb. ii. 188. iii. 463. Brit. flo. ed. 6, p. 245. 
Achillea nobilis, Linn. 
Province - 5. Gloucester; Dr. St. Brody. 
Casual. Exchange Club report for 1868. 
“ Achillea asplenifolia, of gardeners.” 
Province -- 3. Twickenham, Middlesex; Boswell Syme! 
Alien. In the same field with Centaurea Jacea and Hieracium 
aurantiacum ; a triplet tending much to shew each other simply 
Aliens, relicts of some garden. It is apparently the Millefolium 
with purple or deep pink flowers. 
Achillea tanacetifolia, All. 
Provinces - 8-10. Derby; C. C. Babington. York; J. Hardy. 
Extinct casual. Cyb. ii. 184. iii. 464. Bot. Gaz. ii. 96. 
Cotula coronopifolia, Linn. 
Province -- 8. Highbury, Middlesex; Mr. Peter Gray ! 
Casual. In 1869 a rather dense patch of it ‘was growing in a 
building lot nearly opposite the new church of St. Augustine in 
Highbury New Park Road”; Peter Gray. It would be of some 
interest to know how this plant had got to the place named. 
Perhaps originally from the Southern Hemisphere, it had become 
established in Holland in the time of Linneus. It has spread into 
north-west Germany and Denmark; and it has also settled itself 
on the coasts of Spain and Portugal. (‘ Cotula aurea, a native of 
South Europe and the East, occurred a year or two ago in corn- 
fields at Mitcham, where it was associated with many other exotics 
obviously introduced with foreign grain”; Journal of Botany, 
Feb. 1870.) 
