74 
Ant hem is ( L .). 
A. tinctoria (. L .). Fig. 322. Yellow Camomile. Alien. (?) B. 
VII, VIII. 
L. 1897, on road-cop of lane leading seawards from Formby 
Station (Dr. g.). 
A. Cotula (L.). Fig. 323. Stinking Mayweed. Native. A. VII-IX. 
In cultivated ground and by waysides. Frequent. 
C. Birkenhead road to Hoylake. 
A. arvensis (L.). Corn Camomile. Casual. A. VII-IX. 
By roadsides. Very rare. 
C. Roadside between Thornton Hough and Parkgate (D.). 
Note. — Occasionally appears as a ballast plant (r.b.). 
A. nobilis (A.). Fig. 324. True Camomile. Native. P. VII-IX. 
On commons. Very rare. 
L. Parr Flat, by the side of a pathway leading to Sutton 
Moss (D.), (?) extinct. 
Chrysanthemum (. L .). 
C. segetum (A.). Fig. 325. Corn Marigold. Native. A. VII-IX. 
In cultivated fields, particularly of turnips and potatoes. 
Occasional. 
L. Crosby ; Kirkby. 
C. Willaston ; Ness ; Heswall ; Meols ; Little Sutton. 
C. Leucanthemum (L.). Fig. 326. Ox-Eye-Daisy or Marguerite. 
Native. P. VI, VII. 
In pastures and waste places. Very common. 
C. Parthenium (. Pers .). Fig. 327 . Feverfew. Denizen. P. VII-IX. 
In waste places, generally near houses. Occasional. Always 
an escape from cultivation. 
L. In a large quarry at Roby it is very abundant. 
C. Birkenhead; Wallasey; Caldy ; Burton (Dr. g.). 
Matricaria (L.). 
M. inodora (L.). Fig. 328. Scentless Mayweed. Native. A. or B. 
VII, VIII. 
Cultivated fields and waste places. Common. 
b. salina (Bab.). Seaside Mayweed. 
On rocks and among shingle by the sea. Local. Appears at 
intervals along the coast and estuaries of the Dee and Mersey. 
It is specially luxuriant about the rocks at Hilbre. 
