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Human Skeletal Analysis
https://le.ac.uk/modules/2026/ar3076
Module code: AR3076 The human skeleton gives us our only direct link with the people of the past. While pots, flints and other archaeological artefacts give us hints about what people did and how they live, the skeleton shows direct evidence of past lives and lifestyles.
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Human Skeletal Analysis
https://le.ac.uk/modules/2025/ar3076
Module code: AR3076 The human skeleton gives us our only direct link with the people of the past. While pots, flints and other archaeological artefacts give us hints about what people did and how they live, the skeleton shows direct evidence of past lives and lifestyles.
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Human Skeletal Analysis
https://le.ac.uk/modules/2024/ar3076
Module code: AR3076 The human skeleton gives us our only direct link with the people of the past. While pots, flints and other archaeological artefacts give us hints about what people did and how they live, the skeleton shows direct evidence of past lives and lifestyles.
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Psychology and Crime
https://le.ac.uk/modules/2024/cr2009
Module code: CR2009 One of the key areas of interest in Criminology is exploring the reasons why people commit crime. Many theories have been developed in an attempt to account for the motivation and causes of offending behaviour.
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Respiratory and Cancer Precision Medicine
https://le.ac.uk/modules/2024/bs3083
Module code: BS3083 The second precision medicine module will continue the consideration of current cutting-edge topics in the clinical sciences arena: Respiratory Precision Medicine This part of the module will include: The molecular and cellular basis of respiratory...
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Respiratory and Cancer Precision Medicine
https://le.ac.uk/modules/2025/bs3083
Module code: BS3083 The second precision medicine module will continue the consideration of current cutting-edge topics in the clinical sciences arena: Respiratory Precision Medicine This part of the module will include: The molecular and cellular basis of respiratory...
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Speaking your language University creates its first foreignlanguage video news release
https://le.ac.uk/news/2015/november/speaking-your-language-university-creates-its-first-foreign-language-video-news-release
Our Creative Services and News teams have worked together to produce the University’s first foreign-language video news release. The video news release focuses on University of Leicester research to ‘save the most valuable silk moth in the world’.
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Locating the choir within the church
https://le.ac.uk/richard-iii/discovery/locating-the-choir
A small area above the human remains in Trench 1 was carefully widened with a digger to give archaeologists better access to the burial. Jo Appleby and Turi King began to carefully remove the grave soil by hand. Work was slow, to avoid damage to the skeleton.
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Galina Mukamolova
https://le.ac.uk/people/galina-mukamolova
The academic profile of Professor Galina Mukamolova, Professor in Microbial Physiology Departmental Director of Research at University of Leicester
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Unwell or Unwanted? The Mental Health of Western Australia’s Convict Population
https://staffblogs.le.ac.uk/carchipelago/2016/10/17/unwell-or-unwanted-the-mental-health-of-western-australias-convict-population/
Posted by Emma Battell Lowman in Carceral Archipelago on October 17, 2016 By Kellie Moss Western Australia welcomed the transportation of convicts in 1850 as a solution to the economic problems which had affected the colony since its foundation as a free settlement in 1829.