971 research outputs found
Cottunculus torvus , Goode, new species
30. Cottunculus torvus, Goode, new species. Cottunculus torvus, Goode, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., III. p. 479 (name only). Diagnosis. - Head and body smooth, scaleless, covered with a tough lax skin. The length of the head is nearly one third of the extreme length of the body including the caudal; its greatest height, one fourth of the body without the caudal. The greatest width of the head is twice the length of the maxilla. The distance of the vent from the insertion of the anal equals the length of the maxilla. The eye is close to the dorsal profile. The length of the orbit is about equal to that of the snout, and is contained about four and a half times in the greatest length of the head. The intermaxillary is long and slender, its length contained slightly more than three times in the distance from the tip of the snout to the insertion of the tirst dorsal (three and one third times in the length of the head). The maxilla is very slender, except in its posterior third, where it is considerably expanded. The mandible is very stout, posteriorly widened, its length contained nearly two and one third times in that of the head. Teeth in broad villiform bands on the intermaxillary and the mandible. Two short separate similar bands on the vomer. None on the palatines. Head armed with blunt spines, as in C. microps. The distance of the dorsal from the tip of the snout is nearly equal to one third of the total length, caudal included. It consists of six spines and seventeen rays. The anal fin is located midway between the tip of the snout and the end of the caudal fin; it consists of thirteen rays. The length of the upper pectoral rays is equal to that of the postorbital portions of the head. The pectoral rays diminish rapidly in size, the lowest being exceedingly short. The number of rays is twenty-two. The distance of the ventral from the tip of the snout is one third of the total length without the caudal. The length of the free portion of the ventral equals that of the eye The fm consists of one spine and three rays. The caudal consists of ten developed rays. Color light brown, the fins somewhat darker. This species was first noticed in the Fish Commission collections of 1880, and was mentioned by name in a paper published in that year by Mr. Goode. No description accompanied this name, and the author of it has no excuse to offer for following a practice which is so pernicious and indefensible. Specimens were obtained as follows: -Published as part of Goode, G. B. & Bean, T. H., 1883, Reports on the results of dredging under the supervision of Alexander Agassiz, on the east coast of the United States, during the summer of 1880, by the U. S. coast survey steamer " Blake, " Commander J. R. Bartlett, U. S. N., commanding., pp. 183-226 in Bulletin of the Museum of Comparative Zoology at Harvard College 10 (5) on pages 212-213, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.2809
Occasional Publications of the Bounds Law Library, Number Four: Gilded Age of Legal Ethics: Essays on Thomas Goode Jones\u27 1887 Code and the Regulation of the Profession
Occasional Publications of the Bounds Law Library, Number Four contains four essays concerning the 1887 Code of Ethics of the Alabama State Bar Association and its author, Thomas Goode Jones (1844-1914). Jones\u27 Code of Ethics is also included. Jones was an Alabama lawyer, judge, house representative, and governor. The 1887 Code of Ethics of the Alabama State Bar Association was the first code of legal ethics created by a state bar association and served as a structure for following codes of ethics. Jones\u27 Code of Ethics is composed of some 57 duties specifically enjoined by law upon attorneys...https://scholarship.law.ua.edu/occasional_publications/1003/thumbnail.jp
sj-tiff-1-jhc-10.1369_00221554231161693 – Supplemental material for Multiplex Immunofluorescence Image Quality Checking Using DAPI Channel–referenced Evaluation
Supplemental material, sj-tiff-1-jhc-10.1369_00221554231161693 for Multiplex Immunofluorescence Image Quality Checking Using DAPI Channel–referenced Evaluation by Jun Jiang, Raymond Moore, Clarissa E. Jordan, Ruifeng Guo, Rachel L. Maus, Hongfang Liu, Ellen Goode, Svetomir N. Markovic and Chen Wang in Journal of Histochemistry & Cytochemistry</p
sj-tiff-2-jhc-10.1369_00221554231161693 – Supplemental material for Multiplex Immunofluorescence Image Quality Checking Using DAPI Channel–referenced Evaluation
Supplemental material, sj-tiff-2-jhc-10.1369_00221554231161693 for Multiplex Immunofluorescence Image Quality Checking Using DAPI Channel–referenced Evaluation by Jun Jiang, Raymond Moore, Clarissa E. Jordan, Ruifeng Guo, Rachel L. Maus, Hongfang Liu, Ellen Goode, Svetomir N. Markovic and Chen Wang in Journal of Histochemistry & Cytochemistry</p
Occasional Publications of the Bounds Law Library, Number Four: Gilded Age of Legal Ethics: Essays on Thomas Goode Jones\u27 1887 Code and the Regulation of the Profession
Occasional Publications of the Bounds Law Library, Number Four contains four essays concerning the 1887 Code of Ethics of the Alabama State Bar Association and its author, Thomas Goode Jones (1844-1914). Jones\u27 Code of Ethics is also included. Jones was an Alabama lawyer, judge, house representative, and governor. The 1887 Code of Ethics of the Alabama State Bar Association was the first code of legal ethics created by a state bar association and served as a structure for following codes of ethics. Jones\u27 Code of Ethics is composed of some 57 duties specifically enjoined by law upon attorneys...https://scholarship.law.ua.edu/occasional_publications/1003/thumbnail.jp
Bennett College Postcard, circa 1960
A postcard displaying Bennett College's faculty cottages; Belle Tobias Curtis Cottage, Ellen Taylor Trigg Cottage, and Nan Goode Smith Cottage
Falkland Rebeccas
Jean Goode, Bessie Bailey, Mary Zuehlke, Ellen King, Jean Swift, Sadie Brydon, Lillie Smith, Kay Jones, Susie Allan
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Fundamental concepts of commercial law ::fifty years of reflection /
This rich compendium brings together selected key essays on the fundamental concepts and policy issues of English domestic commercial law by Professor Sir Roy Goode QC. Professor Goode is one of the most influential commercial law scholars of the last half-century and his works, which include deep analysis of previously unexplored issues, are characterized by an ability to express the most complex ideas in language of crystal clarity. The essays are grouped thematically into sections, each accompanied by an introduction from the author which sets the essays in their historical and modern context. This valuable authorial insight illuminates the way the law has developed since, and often as a result of, the publication of the papers. Further new material, written especially for this volume, includes a new essay 'Res Cogitans: Food for Thought'. Spanning a career of over fifty years, these innovative and forward-thinking essays broke new ground at the time of their orginal publication and continue to influence decisions and legal thinking to this day, both in the UK and abroad. -
Coelorinchus carminatus Goode 1880
Coelorinchus aff. carminatus (Goode 1880) (Fig. 2 G) Material examined. 35 specimens: MNRJ 26876 (3, 175.0–210.0 mm), T, D- 538; MNRJ 26924 (1, 332.0 mm), T, D- 464; MNRJ 26926 (1, 270.0 mm), T, D- 502; MNRJ 26942 (1, 200.0 mm), T, E- 521; MNRJ 26980 (1, 173.0 mm), T, E- 515; MNRJ 26981 (2, 249.0–259.0 mm), E- 534; MNRJ 26982 (3, 230.0–260.0 mm), T, E- 543; MNRJ 26983 (9, 190.0–262.0 mm), T, E- 502; MNRJ 26984 (1, 331.0 mm), E- 541; MNRJ 26985 (7, 200.0–213.0 mm), T, E- 508; MNRJ 26986 (2, 250.0–358.0 mm), T, E- 517; UF 165817 (2, 150.0–225.0 mm), T, D- 538; USNM 389077 (2, 195.0–200.0 mm), T, D- 538. Remarks. Collected from off Bahia, Espírito Santo and Rio de Janeiro, at depths from 379 to 801 m. Coelorinchus aff. carminatus belongs to a species complex of five species, sometimes treated as subspecies of Coelorinchus caelorinchus (Risso 1810): C. caelorinchus; C. carminatus (Goode 1880); C. geronimo Marshall and Iwamoto 1973; C. marinii Hubbs 1934; and C. polli Marshall and Iwamoto 1973 (T. Iwamoto, pers. comm. 2008). The shape of the snout plate is similar to what is described for C. carminatus; however, the pattern of spinules on the scales differs from specimens from North Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico. The type locality of C. carminatus is off New York, USA (40 °02’ 54 ” N, 70 ° 23 ’ 40 ” W), but holotype is lost (USNM 26001; D. Smith, person. comm., 2009). Further comparisons between our material and specimens obtained from the western and central North Atlantic are being made by the senior author. This species has probably been reported from Brazil and Argentina as C. carminatus (Uyeno 1983; Séret & Andreata 1992; Cousseau 1993; Menezes & Figueiredo 2003 a).Published as part of Melo, Marcelo R. S., Braga, Adriana C., Nunan, Gustavo W. A. & Costa, Paulo A. S., 2010, On new collections of deep-sea Gadiformes (Actinopterygii: Teleostei) from the Brazilian continental slope, between 11 ° and 23 ° S, pp. 25-46 in Zootaxa 2433 on page 32, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.19474
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