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  • £14 million in funding announced for five research projects into land use and Net Zero

    The Land Use for Net Zero Hub, co-led by the University of Leicester and James Hutton Institute, receives £14 million funding for five projects.

  • 2015 events

    Find summaries of all the events held by the Centre for New Writing in 2015.

  • Sneaking a peek at the ring of a 180km crater

    Researchers from the universities of Leicester and Montpellier will be heading to the Yucatán Peninsula of Mexico to participate in a drilling expedition that addresses the science behind the Chicxulub impact structure.

  • 2018 - 2019

    NanTroSEIZE The Nankai Trough Seismogenic Zone Experiment (NanTroSEIZE) is a complex multi-year project that started in 2007 and that is still sailing expeditions along the southeast coast of Japan in 2019.

  • Hope for first drug treatment for life-threatening aneurysms

    Research suggests cholesterol-lowering drugs could be repurposed as treatment in breakthrough for patients

  • Researchers find alternative way to extract high purity silver from used solar panels

    A a new way of extracting valuable metals from end-of-life solar panels has been developed.

  • Effigies, Real Bodies and Iconoclasm. By Sarah Tarlow

    Posted by Emma Battell Lowman in The Power of the Criminal Corpse on February 8, 2016   Last week I was in Chester to examine a PhD thesis there (congratulations to Dr Ruth Nugent – the third person to complete a PhD in the young and dynamic archaeology department there,...

  • Acknowledgements

    A project such as this could not have succeeded without the contribution of many individuals and organisations.

  • Gene mutations and cancer for schools and colleges

    Find out more about what the genetic mutation and cancer research centre offer and the corresponding resources for you to use in your academic studies.

  • Animals’ ‘sixth sense’ more widespread than previously thought

    A study using fruit flies, led by researchers at The Universities of Leicester and Manchester, suggests the animal world’s ability to sense a magnetic field may be more widespread than previously thought.

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