Search

6910 results for: ‘✅麻雀公益传奇(搭建-开发-联系TG电报:saolei44).FPXMEK’

  • Celebrating the Chinese New Year on campus

    Celebrations for the Chinese New Year (CNY) will begin today and the University and Students’ Union are marking the incoming Year of the Rooster in a number of ways: Free fortune cookies and red envelopes with prizes in the Percy Gee Building CNY decorations in the Charles...

  • Hear from the experts on medical marvels

    The public is being invited to hear about latest advances in cancer and conditions such as Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s, and Huntington’s diseases.

  • Portable devices monitor air pollution hotspots in cities

    Scientists at our University are trialling a portable air monitor to gather precise air pollution data at a personal scale in order to help monitor pollution hotspots.

  • Ethnic differences in need for heart pacemakers may have genetic link

    Researchers have found evidence to show that South Asian people (from India, Pakistan, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka) are less likely to require a pacemaker for an abnormally low heart rate compared to white people of European origin.

  • Scholars discuss the formalisation and implications of the Anthropocene

    Scholars discuss the formalisation and implications of the Anthropocene Scholars discuss the formalisation and implications of the Anthropocene| The Anthropocene Working Group holds meeting at the Max Planck Institute for Chemistry. Humans have had a large impact on Earth.

  • People

    Meet the team behind the Biostatistics research at the University of Leicester.

  • Convicts and the Sea

    Blog about the influence of naval practice on the punishment of convicts on the royal dockyard in Gibraltar in the nineteenth century.

  • Law news

    Read news stories from Leicester Law School and keep up to date.

  • 2019 news

    Browse news relating to the Division of Biomedical Services from 2019.

  • Richard III's diet and lifestyle

    By measuring the different isotopes of carbon, nitrogen, oxygen and strontium preserved in Richard III's skeleton, we can find out about the types of food and drink he consumed, as well as where he lived.

Back to top
MENU