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7622 results for: ‘许愿二级域名分发系统网站源码✅项目合作 二开均可 TG:saolei44✅.aiCnZyZenDSZJG’

  • Available Vectors

    list of available vectors

  • Molecular and Cellular Sciences

    Module code: BS1081 This module will lay the groundwork, providing an understanding of how cells function, communicate, divide, and maintain themselves.

  • Molecular and Cellular Sciences

    Module code: BS1081 This module will lay the groundwork, providing an understanding of how cells function, communicate, divide, and maintain themselves.

  • Molecular and Cellular Sciences

    Module code: BS1081 This module will lay the groundwork, providing an understanding of how cells function, communicate, divide, and maintain themselves.

  • Opportunities open up in South Korea for students and researchers

    We have signed a new agreement with a major university in South Korea to send students to South East Asia as part of their degree programme.

  • Dismemberment in Prehistory – Not Just for the Criminally Insane. By Shane McCorristine

    Posted by Emma Battell Lowman in The Power of the Criminal Corpse on November 23, 2015 Francisco Goya, “Great deeds! Against the dead!” (1810s). Source: Wikimedia Commons. For as long as humans have been around we have cut up, hacked, butchered, and mutilated corpses.

  • Government funding for project to supply Africa with electricity from waste

    An Earth Observation Innovation team from the University of Leicester is collaborating with PyroGenesys Ltd. and a number of UK and international organisations on a project to generate off-grid electricity for remote rural communities in Africa starting with Nigeria.

  • Research centres and groups

    Research groups including the Centre for European Law and Internationalisation (CELI), the Centre for Rights and Equality in Health Law (CREHL) and the European Working Group on Labour Law.

  • Instruments

    Get more information on the instruments and equipment available as part of the Flow Cytometry facility at Leicester.

  • A study by a Leicester scientist has answered the 100-year-old question about how chromosomes get their iconic X-shape

    A team of researchers led by Professor Daniel Panne at the University of Leicester and Dr Benjamin Rowland at the Netherlands Cancer Institute have determined at a molecular level how the iconic X-shape of chromosomes is generated during cell division.

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