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Dr. Frederick Gisborne
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Dr. Paul Gishler
Deceased Date: 1992-10-15
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Graham Gladwell
Affiliation: University of Waterloo
Keywords: Vibration theory, elasticity theory, contact problems, inverse problems, matrix analysis
Deceased Date: 2017-03-11
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Graham M.L. Gladwell, Department of Civil Engineering, University of Waterloo, has gained international recognition as a researcher, lecturer, author and editor in three areas of Applied Mechanics: Vibration Analysis, Inverse Problems in Vibration and Contact Problems in Elasticity Theory. His interdisciplinary research, which applies mathematics to engineering problems, has led not only to the solution of important technical problems in all three fields, but also, through his monographs, to the unification and codification of research in these fields. His notable achievements include the qualitative characterization of vibrating systems, the definitive solution of inverse problems for the vibrating beam and the solution of contact problems by the systematic reduction of the governing integral equations to Riemann-Hilbert problems.
Dr. John Glashan
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Dr. Irvine Glass
Deceased Date: 1994-10-03
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Dr. R. Glen
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Prof. H. Patrick Glenn
Affiliation: McGill University
Keywords: Private international law, civil procedure, judicial institutions, comparative law, legal history
Deceased Date: 2014-10-01
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H. Patrick Glenn, Faculty of Law, McGill University, is a world-renowned scholar whose innovative approaches to comparative law and legal theory have contributed to opening up the field of comparison of judicial institutions. His studies on the theory, history and evolution of western legal traditions, together with his pioneering scholarship on customary law, codification, legal methodology and the judicial borrowing of persuasive authorities across jurisdictional boundaries have helped to redefine scholarship in comparative law research. He has also authored monographs on private international law and on the Canadian refugee policy.
Vidyadhar Godambe
Affiliation: University of Waterloo
Keywords: Inference, estimation, estimating functions, survey sampling, biostatistics
Deceased Date: 2016-06-09
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Vidyadhar P. Godambe is internationally recognized as a major influence on the development of statistics over the past five decades. He has made outstanding and innovative contributions to the theory of estimation, formulating the methodology of estimating functions, leading and stimulating its further development, and promoting its application to diverse areas.
Prof. Barbara Godard
Affiliation: York University
Deceased Date: 2010-05-16
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Dr. Warren Godson
Affiliation: Environment Canada
Deceased Date: 2001-10-31
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Dr. Godson had a distinguished career at the University of British Columbia and the University of Toronto, winning ten scholarships and research awards. He entered the Meteorological Service in June 1942 and in 1954 was appointed Superintendent of Research, a position he now holds.
Dr. Godson has had ninety-two meteorological papers accepted for publication in technical journals covering almost every field in atmospheric science from induced precipitation to solar terrestrial relations.
Dr. Godson is a member or officer of numerous international meteorological and related organizations and has participated by invitation in eighteen important international symposia. Dr. Godson acts as an advisor to a large number of meteorological groups and associations in Canada. Dr. Godson has, through his own efforts and through his wise council, greatly advanced research programmes in meteorology both in Canada and throughout the world.
Dr. Lorne Gold
Affiliation: National Research Council
Keywords: Ice, engineering, strength, lake hydrology
Deceased Date: 2019-11-01
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Dr. Gold has, since 1952, been in charge of snow and ice research at the National Research Council (Division of Building Research), during which time he and his colleagues have established an international reputation for high quality research. Though a physicist by training, he has worked mainly on engineering problems such an the bearing strength of freshwater ice, pressure of ice against structures, and the insulating effect of a snow cover. One of his chief contributions has been in the study of the failure of ice, in the course of which he has produced a series of papers which is at present definitive in this important field.
Dr. Alan Goodwin
Affiliation: University of Toronto
Deceased Date: 2008-06-10
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Alan Murray Goodwin (B.Sc. Queen's; M.Sc., Ph. D. Wisconsin) has established himself as an authority on the Canadian Precambrian through extensive field and laboratory study and publication, particularly with reference to the synthesis of Precambrian stratigraphy. His continuing study of Archean greenstone belts is adding new dimensions to our understanding of these complex assemblages of volcanic rocks. His work has also demonstrated some fundamental genetic relations between the several types of major mineral deposits found in these rocks and elucidated the sequence of igneous events which produced such piles of volcanic rocks in Archean time.
Dr. William Goodwin
Deceased Date: 1941-01-17
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Dr. Charles Gordon
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Dr. Andrew Gordon
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Dr. Robert Gordon
Deceased Date: 1973-05-14
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Dr. H. Gordon
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Dr. Myron Gordon
Affiliation: University of Toronto
Keywords: Economic development in China and the West
Deceased Date: 2010-07-05
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Myron J. Gordon has made distinctive theoretical and applied research contributions to the fields of finance, accounting, and several related aspects of public policy. His enduring legacies are the valuation of securities and the associated question of the cost of capital. This research was followed by important contributions to the analysis of the regulation of utilities and the debt-equity choices
faced by firms. His extensive published research and doctoral supervision have added greatly to the study of finance in Canada and abroad. Among other honours, he was elected president of the American Finance Association in 1975.
Dr. D. Goring
Affiliation: University of Toronto
Keywords: Wood, pulp, paper, applied chemistry
Deceased Date: 2021-07-19
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Has established an international reputation for his imaginative and far-reaching researches on (1) the physical chemistry of cellulose, hemicelluloses and lignin both in solution and in the solid state, (2) the topochemistry of delignification using UV microspectrophotometry (3) the structure of water and (4) the hydrodynamic behaviour of polymers and polyelectrolytes. He is undoubtedly the foremost physical chemist in Canada (if not in the world) working on the chemistry of wood and its constituents. In addition he has contributed substantially to the training of graduate students.
Dr. Eville Gorham
Affiliation: University of Minnesota
Keywords: Ecology, limnology, biogeochemistry, peatlands, paleoecology
Deceased Date: 2006-11-09
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Outstanding researcher into acid rain, biogeochemical cycles and ecology of peatlands, Eville Gorham wrote seminal papers on the impact of atmospheric processes on natural ecosystems. Born in Halifax 1925; M.Sc. Dalhousie; Ph.D. Univ. College, London. Canadian citizen, naturalized U.S.A. 1984. Professor Botany Univ. London 1950-54, Senior Scientific Officer, Freshwater Biological Association U.K. 1954-58; Univ. Toronto 1958-61; Prof. and Head, Dept. of Biol., Univ. Calgary 1965; Prof. Botany and Ecology Univ. Minnesota 1962-1998. Professor Emeritus 1999. Pioneering studies of acid rain in U.K. in 1955, smelter impacts at Sudbury on forest and lake vegetation and on lake chemistry, 1960-63. Discovery of mosses and lichens as accumulators of radioactive fallout 1958. Continuing studies of chemistry of northern peatlands, including role in carbon cycle and likely responses to climate warming.
He is member of numerous panels, workshops and committees, in the Royal Society of Canada and the U.S. National Research Council. He presently is member of the Board on Water Science and Technology, U.S. National Research Council and its Committee on Hydrologic Science, as well as of the Council of Scientific Advisors, Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, Mass.
Dr. Paul Gorham
Affiliation: University of Alberta
Deceased Date: 2006-11-09
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Paul R. Gorham, B.Sc. (New Brunswick), M.Sc. (Maine), and Ph.D. (California Institute of Technology, 1943), joined the staff of the National Research Council in 1945. His research has included various aspects of plant physiology and photosynthesis and he has recently made substantial contributions to our knowledge of toxicity in the blue-green algae, and translocation in higher plants. Dr. Gorham is largely responsible for the success of the annual Plant Physiology Conferences (1954-58) and he has been elected first President of the newly formed Canadian Society of Plant Physiologists. He is also Vice-Chairman of the General Programme Committee for the IX International Botanical Congress.
Dr. Allan Gornall
Affiliation: University of Toronto
Keywords: Protein
Liver
Hormones
Aldosterone
Hypertension
Deceased Date: 2006-03-15
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Dr. Allan Godfrey Gornall has made valuable contributions to fundamental biochemistry and to clinical chemistry. Basic work on intermediates in the biosynthesis of urea was followed by studies on liver function and the chemical pathology of jaundice. Subsequent investigations dealt with plasma proteins and the effect of protein intake on experimental liver injury. During the past 13 years his work has dealt mainly with adrenal and renal factors in hypertension.
Dr. Gornall is well known and respected not only for outstanding contributions to research but for the excellence of his teaching and for unselfish service to his professional associates as an efficient executive officer, in various roles, in local and national bodies.
John Gosline
Affiliation: The University of British Columbia
Deceased Date: 2016-11-07
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Dr. John Gosline is a world leader in the field of molecular biomechanics. Although his special interests are focussed on mechanical and molecular design principles of structural biomaterials, he has had a seminal (deep and broad) impact on the entire discipline. One factor contributing to his influence was the book "Mechanical Design in Organisms", probably the first coherent statement of the strategy of applying engineering principles to design in biological systems. Along with his coauthors, Dr. Gosline enjoyed the fruits of having released the right book at the right time - when its major effect was to shape the next 20-year development of the discipline! A subsequent generation of researchers all attest to the profound shaping effect this book has had on the field. His research per se is a second major factor contributing to Dr. Gosline's impressive impact on the field: in choice of model systems (from spider silk to elastin, from fibre-reinforced composites to keratins and cuticles), in analytical approach, and in principles developed, his work has provided biological engineers with a roadmap to the future.
Mr. Amédée Gosselin
Affiliation: Université Laval
Deceased Date: 1941-12-20
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