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7974 results for: ‘Blackcat主题-Wordpress✅项目合作 二开均可 TG:saolei44✅.UElWazyvHGwksec’

  • Tequila: Pulque’s Friend, Cousin, Usurper?

    Deborah Toner discusses the relationship and rivalry between pulque and tequila in Mexican history, and summarises a recently published book by Marie Sarita Gaytan, Tequila: Distilling the Spirit of Mexico (Stanford University Press, 2014)

  • Researchers identify common biological features of different types of asthma

    Researchers have identified biological variations in lung tissue samples that for the first time can help identify people with mild asthma from those with moderate or severe asthma.

  • Physics & Astronomy

    Juno Mission unveils the depth and structure of planet’s shrinking red spot and colourful bands Posted by Physics & Astronomy in Leicester to Jupiter: The Juno Mission on October 29, 2021 Dr.

  • Leicester to Jupiter: The Juno Mission: Academic and staff blogs from the University of Leicester

    Academic and staff blogs from the University of Leicester

  • Juno Mission unveils the depth and structure of planet’s shrinking red spot and colourful bands

    Posted by Physics & Astronomy in Leicester to Jupiter: The Juno Mission on October 29, 2021 Dr.

  • A change of plan for Juno’s orbit

    Posted by Rosie Johnson in Leicester to Jupiter: The Juno Mission on November 14, 2016 This artist’s rendering shows NASA’s Juno spacecraft making one of its close passes over Jupiter.

  • The Aesthetics of Authenticity in the Modern Chain Pub – University of Leicester

    Discussion of a book chapter about the "Pub Authenticity-Value Aesthetic" in relation to the JD Wetherspoon pub chain, recently published in an edited volume Biographies of Drink (CSP, 2015)

  • Cider in Unexpected Places? Rural Chile and the Cider Pressing – University of Leicester

    Deborah Toner discusses the social and cultural importance of cider making in rural Southern Chile in South America, summarising the work of Anton Daughters that appears in recent book Alcohol in Latin America: A Social and Cultural History, edited by Gretchen Pierce and...

  • Biological Sciences (Microbiology) MBiolSci

    Microorganisms may be small, but they tell us more about life on Earth than almost any other life form. On this degree you will learn how and why microorganisms cause disease and how microbes have been used for millennia in everything from food production to sewage treatment.

  • Biological Sciences (Microbiology) BSc

    Microorganisms. They might be small, but they tell us more about life on Earth than almost any other living things. You’ll learn how they’re both helpful and harmful, as well as the evolving role of microbiology in biotechnology, health and disease.

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