110,209 research outputs found
Goodwin, H G, NX5537
This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/388142Surname: GOODWIN. Given Name(s) or Initials: H G. Military Service Number or Last Known Location: NX5537. Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: 1138.210912
Item: [2016.0049.20435] "Goodwin, H G, NX5537
Goodwin, A G, 413895
This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/388129Surname: GOODWIN. Given Name(s) or Initials: A G. Military Service Number or Last Known Location: 413895. Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: 58786.210899
Item: [2016.0049.20422] "Goodwin, A G, 413895
Goodwin, A. G.
Carte de Visite of A. G. Goodwin, 13th Maine Infantry; From the Janet & Bedford Hayes Collectionhttps://digitalmaine.com/arc_civilwarportraits/3148/thumbnail.jp
Goodwin, A. G.
Carte de Visite of A. G. Goodwin, 13th Maine Infantry; From the Janet & Bedford Hayes Collectionhttps://digitalmaine.com/arc_civilwarportraits/3148/thumbnail.jp
Goodwin or Kalecki in Demand? Functional Income Distribution and Aggregate Demand in the Short Run
In a seminal paper on Marxian business cycle theory, Richard Goodwin (1967) presented a model which assumed that a higher wage share leads to lower investment and thus a general economic slowdown. In contrast, Michal Kalecki (1971) argued that a higher wage share would have an expansionary effect because the consumption propensity out of wage income is higher than that out of profit income. Based on a general model that allows for wage-led as well as profit-led demand regimes, this paper estimates the effects of a change in the wage share on aggregate private domestic demand with quarterly data for 12 OECD countries.functional income distribution, demand, Goodwin cycle, Kalecki, Post Keynesian economics, Marxian economics
Stokes, B G (Bruce Goodwin), NX55715
This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/419515Surname: STOKES. Given Name(s) or Initials: B G (BRUCE GOODWIN). Military Service Number or Last Known Location: NX55715. Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: 39952.244094
Item: [2016.0049.51776] "Stokes, B G (Bruce Goodwin), NX55715
Rhombomys opimus subsp. sodalis Goodwin 1939, new subspecies
Rhombomys opimus sodalis, new subspecies Elburz Giant Gerbil TYPE.-No. 88867, Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist.; adult d; Maravih, Incha district; alt. about 2000 feet; collector, G. G. Goodwin, Nov. 15, 1938. The type is a skin and skull in good condition. Besides the type there are 22 topotypes including 12 specimens in spirits and 6 specimens from Dasht, alt. 3200 feet, on the headwaters of the Gurgan River. GENERAL CHARACTERS.-A pinkish cinnamon gerbil about the size of R. opimus from the sandy wastes on the northeast shore of the Aral Sea but differing in coloration. DESCRIPTION.-Color above in general tone pinkish cinnamon, overlaid with black; the hairs dark neutral gray at base followed by a broad band of light ochraceous buff and tipped with black, darkest on crown of head and rump; sides of body, light buff; upperside of fore and hind feet, ring around eye, and ears, light buff; tail, uniform cinnamon-buff with a crest of black hairs on distal half; under parts buffy white, the light buff of sides extending irregularly over much of under parts; base of hairs dark neutral gray. Skull, massive; front incisors with two grooves, characteristic of genus; similar to R. opimus but interparietal broader and molariform teeth larger. MEASUREMENTS.-Type (skin measured in the flesh); topotypes (adult e and adult 9) in parentheses. Total length, 320 (354, 300); tail vertebrae, 140 (155, 135); hind foot including claws, 45 (44.6, 43). SKULL.-Greatest length, 45.9 (44.6, 43); condylo-incisive length, 41 (40.4, 39.1); interorbital constriction, 8 (8, 7.6); zygomatic width, 25.8 (26.7, 25.8); length of nasals, 17.2 (16.7, 16.9); interparietal, length 5.4 (6, 5.1), width 7.9 (8.7, 9.4); bullae 16.3 (16, 15); alveoli of upper molar series, 7.5 (7.4, 7). REMARKS.-All the known forms of Rhombomys are closely allied, showing little variation in cranial characters and having a wide range in Central Asia. R. o. sodalis requires comparison only with R. o. opimus from the sandy wastes, northeast of the Aral Sea and R. o. fumicolorfrom the Syr-Daria, 35 miles northeast of Kokand. Both forms inhabit low desert areas whereas the new race was taken on the upland plateaus from 2000 to 3000 feet elevation in northeastern Iran where a new geographical race might be expected. Typical R. opimus averages smaller than sodalis and coloration more yellowish. R. o. fumicolor is larger than the Iran race and pelage dark grayish instead of pinkish cinnamon.Published as part of Goodwin, George G., 1939, Five Newrodents From The Eastern Elburz Moitntains And A New Race Of Hare From Teheran, pp. 1-6 in American Museum Novitates 1050 on page 4, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.457043
Glis glis subsp. petruccii Goodwin 1939, new subspecies
Petrucci Dormouse TYPE.-NO. 88759, Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist.; semi-adult d; Gouladahfoothillsof the Kurkhud Mountains, District Bujnurd, northeastern Iran; alt. about 3000 feet; collector, G. G. Goodwin, Nov. 4, 1938. The type is a skin and skull in good condition, upper molars slightly worn, premolar and third molars in place but unworn. GENERAL CHARACTERS.- A comparatively small dormouse with short thick buffy gray pelage, and only a few scattered long black guard hairs; tail, bushy, much darker than back; under parts, white; skull, short and broad with high smooth braincase and relatively large molars. DESCRIPTION.-Color above dark drab, darkest on middle of back and grading to a paler and more buffy shade on sides of body and rump, the dark drab extending down upperside of fore and hind limbs to metatarsals and metacarpals; basalcolorofhairdarkneutralgray; areabehind and below ear light buff, darkened by the basal color of hair; ears, dark mouse-gray, moderately covered with fine blackish hairs; head, slightly paler than back, grading to almost buffy white on nose; eye-ring and center line on tip of nose, blackish, Tail dark clove-brown for most of its length, becoming color of back at extreme base. Under parts, including inner side of fore and hind limbs, toes of fore and hind feet and a sharply defined line down underside of tail to tip, white to roots of hair; the white of under parts extending on cheeks to lower edge of eye ring. SKULL.-Small, broad, with short rostrum; braincase deep and slightly elevated above rostrum; molariform teeth relatively large and broad. MEASUREMENTS.-Skin measured in the flesh. Total length, 220 mm.; head and body, 120; tail, 100; hind foot including claws, 27. Skull: greatest length, 31.5; condylobasal length, 30; zygomatic breadth, 19.6; interorbital constriction, 4.8; nasals, 10; diastema, 6.8; alveoli of maxillary toothrow, 6.5. REMARKS.- GliS g. petruccii is the smallest race of the genus Glis and apparently smaller than Glis g. minutus Martino from Jugoslavia,and G. g. spoliatus Thomas from Trebizond, Turkey. G. g. caspicusSatunin from Aschabad, Turkmania, the nearest geographical race, is about equal in size to typical European Glis glis according to Thomas and therefore larger than petruccii. A series of 8 specimens from near Astrabad, eastern Mazandaran, may be referable to caspicus. They are considerably larger than petruccii. External and cranial measurements of very young animals are decidedly greater than in the new race though they are practically indistinguishable in color. Four flat skins without feet given to me by a fur dealer at Astrabad and said to have been taken locally are much larger than any of the Legendre Iran Expedition specimens. They have long coarse pelage and are about the color and size of a large European Glis glis. It is possible that these skins represent Satunin's caspicus. The type of petruccii was taken under some blackberry bushes in a valley of oak trees, surrounded by open rolling grassland country. Several days' trapping yielded no further specimens, which indicated that they had gone into hibernation. I have named this new form in honor of His Excellency, L. Petrucci, Italian Minister to Iran, in appreciation of his splendid co6peration and interest in the wild life of Iran.Published as part of Goodwin, George G., 1939, Five Newrodents From The Eastern Elburz Moitntains And A New Race Of Hare From Teheran, pp. 1-6 in American Museum Novitates 1050 on page 1, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.457043
Meriones (Pallasiomys) iranensis Goodwin 1939, new species
Meriones (Pallasiomys) iranensis, new species Iran Gerbil TYPE.-No. 88888, Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist.; adult d; Dasht, a small village on the headwaters of the Gurgan River, on the south side of the Gurgan Valley; alt. about 3200 feet; collector, G. G. Goodwin, Nov. 23, 1938. The type is a skin in fair condition and skull in good condition. Besides the type there is an adult female specimen in spirits with damaged skull from Maravih, Incha district, north of the Gurgan gorge. GENERAL CHARACTERS.- A medium-sized, slender gerbil with fine, dense, grayish pelage; proximal median area of soles of hind feet naked, sides and terminal half, haired; under parts white with basal portion of hairs dusky; ears, small. Skull, superficially similar to M. erythrourus Gray but smaller, with more inflated bullae and larger teeth. DESCRIPTION.-Color above pinkish buff, grading to light buff on sides of head and body, overlaid with black-tipped hairs, base of hair deep neutral gray; ears, pinkish buff; postauricular patch, light buff; upperside of tail, cinnamon-buff mixed with black. In the type the hair on the terminal third of the tail is badly worn but in the Maravih specimen the dark hairs on the distal third graduate longer to a black bush pencil; underside of tail, clear cinnamonbuff to tip; fore and hind feet, white, faintly washed withlight buff. Under parts white, base of hairs deep neutral gray except on chin and throat where the hairs are white to roots. SKULL.-Normal for the Palla8iomys group; smaller than typical M. erythrourus with bullae relatively more swollen, rostrum longer, palatal foramina shorter, ending slightly in front of a line across anterior face of first molars, molariform teeth larger and last molar without indication of a rudimentary transverse ridge. Supra-meataltriangle long and narrow. MEASUREMENTS.-Dried skin; specimen in spirits in parentheses. Total length, 300 mm. (260); tail vertebrae, 128 (130); hind foot including claws, 35 (33); ear from notch, 14.5 (15.5). Skull: greatest length, 40.5 (40); condylo-incisive length, 36.9; interorbital constriction, 6.6 (6.5); zygomatic breadth, 22; length of nasals, 15.1 (15); alveoli of upper molar series, 6.2 (5.8); palatal foramina, 6.7; bullae, length 16 (15), breadth 10.5 (10.5), posterior border to front of meatus, 13.2 (13.1); suprameatal-triangle, length 5 (4.8), breadth 2.3 (2.2). REMARKS.- M. iranensis may be distinguished from other described races by the combination of rather small size, soft grayish pelage, partially naked soles, slender feet, white under parts, hairs grayish at base, normal inflation of bullae and narrowsupra-meatal-triangle. Itissmaller, more slender and grayer in color than a specimen of M. erythrourus from the same locality. M. syrius is a larger and more robust race, inhabiting the Syrian and Arabian desert areas; M. vinogradovi from Aserbeidschan, Persia, about equals iranensis in size and color but in this species the solesofthefeetarecompletelyhaired. M. charon from the Karun Desert region, Persia, is a smaller race related to M. longifrons and needs no comparison with the present species, M. e. maxeratis Heptner from the Chandyr River, Kopet Dag Transcaspian, is a small race of the erythrourus group, smaller than M. iranensis, with a shorter foot, smaller skull and less inflated bullae. The Iran gerbil is an inhabitant of the high plateau desert country of northeastern Iran. It is probably diurnal and not particularly abundant.Published as part of Goodwin, George G., 1939, Five Newrodents From The Eastern Elburz Moitntains And A New Race Of Hare From Teheran, pp. 1-6 in American Museum Novitates 1050 on page 3, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.457043
Letter from Thos. J. Henley to G. W. Manypenny with a letter from A. C. Goodwin, 1855
Enclosed report of A. C. Goodwin, Agent without compensation on Russian River, upon the condition of the Indians in that region
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