1,217 research outputs found
Digital humanities platforms set to challenge technical barriers to digital research skills development.
Digital humanists are becoming increasingly aware of the potential for much wider impact through ‘crowdscribing’ and other innovative approaches to digital research. Emma Goodwin provides further information on a new initiative DHCrowdscribe that allows early career researchers to gain from resources and expertise to support technical project development. This approach will also foster wider collaboration between the humanities and other more scientific or technical disciplines
First home of W.H. Goodwin at Toongabbie
Three generations of the Goodwin family stand outside a weatherboard home with a bark roof in 1884. Grandfather Robert Goodwin and his wife Mary stand in the doorway. From the left at the back are Emma, Grace, Suzy and Henry. In the front are Aunt Becky, Mrs Martha Goodwin and Alice. On the right are Evelyn, Mr William Henry Goodwin and Charlotte. William Henry Goodwin selected land at Toongabbie in 1877, one mile from the township. They later shifted to Toongabbie
GetUBetter lockout report evaluation
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-Share Alike 4.0 International License.
General rights
All content in PEARL is protected by copyright law. Author manuscripts are made available in accordance with publisher
policies. Please cite only the published version using the details provided on the item record or document. In the absence of an
open licence (e.g. Creative Commons), permissions for further reuse of content should be sought from the publisher or author
The ancestry of Elisha Goodwin of sixth generation of Goodwin family of Kittery, York County, Maine, and his descendants.
"The author ... has copied from 'The Goodwins of Kittery, Me"," by John Samuel Goodwin "the ancestry of Elisha (of the sixth generation from Daniel the emigrant)"Mode of access: Internet
First home of W.H. Goodwin at Toongabbie [picture].
Three generations of the Goodwin family stand outside a weatherboard home with a bark roof in 1884. Grandfather Robert Goodwin and his wife Mary stand in the doorway. From the left at the back are Emma, Grace, Suzy and Henry. In the front are Aunt Becky, Mrs Martha Goodwin and Alice. On the right are Evelyn, Mr William Henry Goodwin and Charlotte. William Henry Goodwin selected land at Toongabbie in 1877, one mile from the township. They later shifted to Toongabbie.Item held by Centre for Gippsland Studies, Monash University
Tedania (Tedaniopsis) wellsae Goodwin & Brickle 2012, sp. nov.
Tedania (Tedaniopsis) wellsae sp. nov. (Figure 16) Type material: Holotype: BELUM Mc 7578. Sample in 95% ethanol, tissue section and spicule preparation on slides. Prion Island Site 1, South Georgia (54°001.590’S, 37°15.178’W); depth 17.6m; collected by C. Goodwin, D. Poncet, and P. Brewin, 19 th November 2010. Paratypes: Samples in 95% ethanol, tissue section and spicule preparation on slides. BELUM Mc 7637. Bird Sound Site 2, South Georgia (54°01.149’S, 38° 01.026’W); depth 18m; collected by C. Goodwin, S. Cartwright and P. Brickle, 22 nd November 2010. BELUM Mc 7642. Bird Sound, Site 4, South Georgia (54°02.095’S, 38° 00.187’W); depth 6m; collected by J. Brown and S. Brown, 22 nd November 2010. Comparative material examined: BMNH 79.12.27.12 Tedania tenuicapitata Ridley, 1881, Holotype. Tissue section and spicule preparation slides. Etymology: Named after Dr Emma Wells, the algal taxonomist on this expedition. External morphology: In situ appearance: Custard yellow thin (<5mm) crust. Encrusting on bedrock or algae and forming patches up to 15cm in diameter. Bumpy surface with veins visible in between bumps (Fig. 16a). Preserved appearance: Cream crust. Firm, not compressible. Surface in brain-like folds (Fig. 16a). Skeleton: The choanosomal skeleton is formed of ascending columns of 4–6 styles irregularly branched and connected with small columns 2–3 styles wide. The onychaetes combined into the choanosomal fibres and brushes but many free onychaetes also present in the choanosomal tissue. The ectosomal skeleton conststs of a palisade of tornotes (Fig. 16b). Spicules: Measurements from Mc7578. Styles: 301(335)382 by 9.6(13.6)17.3µm. Some faintly curved (Fig. 16c). Ectosomal tornotes: 241(309)278 by 6.7(9.4)11.7µm. Anisotornotes with mucronate ends (Fig. 16d). Onychaetes: 63(74)86 and 159(190)206 by 1.4(2.2)2.9µm. The large are pointed at both ends, the small have one pointed and one rounded end (Fig. 16e, f, g). Remarks: This species can be separated from others in the subgenus by the size range of its spicules (Table 8). They are similar in size range to Tedania (Tedaniopsis) tenuicapitata Ridley, 1881 which has similarly sized styles (296–387µm) and tornotes (185–270 µm), but much longer large onychaetes (132–327 and 52–75µm). However, comparison with the type specimen shows that all spicules are much less robust and it does not have the pronounced ascending skeletal columns found in this species. It differs from Tedania (Tedaniopsis) aurantiaca sp. nov. in having an encrusting rather than massive external form and the smaller size of its styles, ectosomal tornotes and onychaetes.Published as part of Goodwin, Claire & Brickle, Paul, 2012, Sponge biodiversity of South Georgia island with descriptions of fifteen new species, pp. 1-48 in Zootaxa 3542 on pages 29-3
Tom Goodwin and Bob Kindleman
Photograph - Tom Goodwin on a binder and Bob Kindleman on a tractor, Athabasca, Albert
Pseudo-Goodwin cycles in a Minsky model
© The Author 2016. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Cambridge Political Economy Society. All rights reserved. Goodwin cycles result from the dynamic interaction between a profit-led demand regime and a reserve army effect in income distribution. The paper proposes the concept of a pseudo-Goodwin cycle. We define this as a counter-clockwise movement in output and wage share space which is not generated by the usual Goodwin mechanism. In particular, it does not depend on a profit-led demand regime. As a demonstration, a simple Minsky model is extended by adding a reserve army distribution mechanism such that the wage share responds positively to output. In the extended Minsky model, cycles are generated purely through the interaction between financial fragility and demand. In a first step we assume no feedback from income distribution to demand. We demonstrate that the model generates a pseudo- Goodwin cycle in output-wage share space. In a second step, we show that the result continues to hold even if a wage-led demand regime is introduced, although this can introduce instability. Our models demonstrate that the existence of a counter- clockwise movement of output and the wage share cannot be regarded as proof of the existence of a Goodwin cycle and a profit-led demand regime
Like the roses need their fragrance [first line of chorus]
strophic with choruspiano and voiceads on inside back and on back covers for Leo Feist, Inc. stock2919-3Johns Hopkins University, Levy Sheet Music Collection, Box
154a, Item 015By Joe Goodwin, Joe McCarthy and Al Piantadosi.Successfully Introduced by Miss Emma CarusAl[?] Kelley, 191
Like the roses need their fragrance [first line of chorus]
strophic with choruspiano and voiceads on inside back and on back covers for Leo Feist, Inc. stock2919-3Johns Hopkins University, Levy Sheet Music Collection, Box
154a, Item 015By Joe Goodwin, Joe McCarthy and Al Piantadosi.Successfully Introduced by Miss Emma CarusAl[?] Kelley, 191
- …
