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  • The Diary of a Dissection: Jane Jamieson and the Newcastle Barber Surgeons. By Patrick Low

    Posted by Emma Battell Lowman in The Power of the Criminal Corpse on September 19, 2016   The recent furore in France, over the wearing of Burkinis, has shone a new light on an age-old societal problem; the female body.

  • LeCTIS Seminar Series 2018-19

    See the programme for the LeCTIS Seminar Series for the 2018-19 academic year.

  • Group contacts

    Contacts list for Space Projects and Instrumentation group

  • Comparisons and Connections (part 2)

    Posted by Christian De Vito in Carceral Archipelago on March 9, 2015 In her last blog (https://staffblogs.le.ac.

  • Potential new targets for cancer treatments identified by Leicester research team

    An international consortium of scientists led by a group from the University has announced a new advance in understanding the mechanisms of cancer and how to target it more effectively with new treatments.

  • Survey reveals new archaeological findings at threatened ancient harbour

    An expedition by a team from the School of Archaeology and Ancient History at Dreamer’s Bay, RAF Akrotiri, Cyprus between 10 to 22 September 2015 has unearthed a series of ancient artefacts.

  • Seeds from Hiroshima atomic bomb survivor tree take root in Leicester

    Seeds from trees which survived the atomic bomb in Hiroshima have taken root in Leicester in time for the 80th anniversary of VJ Day.

  • Student midwife shortlisted for prestigious award

    A student midwife, who was inspired to take up the profession because of her own childbirth experiences, is in line for a prestigious award

  • Expedition 313: New Jersey Shelf

    April 2009 continuing to July 2009 Unravelling global sea level changes from the effects of subsidence and sediment supply requires a fundamental understanding of passive margin sedimentation.

  • Chicxulub crater study suggests asteroid impacts could create habitats for life

    Scientists studying a 65-million-year old crater in the Gulf of Mexico, caused by an asteroid impact, claim it could have provided a habitat for early life to take hold on earth.

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