90 
ANTHEMIS. 
667. A. nobilis, Linn. Native. English. 
668. A. arvensis, Linn. Native. English. 
Cultivated fields ; not unfrequent. 
669. A. Cotula, Linn. Native. English. 
In similar situations to the preceding, but more frequent 
ACHILLiEA. 
671. A. Ptarmica, Linn. Native. British. 
A. tanacetifolia, All. Alien or Incognit. 
On a rough hilly bank near Ringing Low, near Sheffield — J. Hardy, 
fide G. G. Babington (A.N.H., Feb. 1847). Extinct in 1849 — W. Bor- 
rer (Cyb. Brit. iii. 464). I fully believe it to be no modem inter- 
loper ; but it is now rare, or almost eradicated. I find it has been 
carried into several gardens at Sheffield ” — J. Hardy, in litt. 1854. 
A. serrata, Smith. Incognit. 
“ A specimen of a yellow flowered Achillea, a mere fragment with- 
out leaves, is preserved in my herbarium, along with the following 
label : ‘ Societas Botanica Edinensis, Achillea serrata, Hab. Bur- 
lington, Co. York, Comm. Mann. Coll. 1840.’ As far as I can say 
from the top of a flowering stem only, this is the plant intended by 
English botanists under the name of A. serrata — one cultivated in 
gardens. And I deem it highly probable that the fragment in ques- 
tion once grew in a garden, although labelled as if a wild Briton ” 
— H. G. Watson, in litt. 1854. 
672. A. millefolium, Linn. Native. British. 
A. tomentosa, Linn. Alien. 
A casual garden escape. Stokesley, Cleveland, 1852! — W. Mudd. 
ORDER XLV. CAMPANULACEiE. 
CAMPANULA. 
675. C. rotundifolia, Linn. Native. British. 
676. C. patula, Linn. Native. English. 
Near Rotherham — L. Langley. Gravelly banks of the Esk, Ruswarp, 
near Whitby! — W. Mudd. Bank of the Tees below Yarm — T. J. 
Foggitt. 
677. C. rapunculus, Linn. Denizen. English. 
Hedges at Wressle, near ILowden — Rev. Archdeacon Peirson (B. G. 
676). Hedgebanks and borders of fields, Cliffrig, Ayton \—W. Mudd. 
