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13350 results for: ‘ShopNC 商城V4.1版源码分享 官方完美运营 功能完善版✅项目合作 二开均可 TG:saolei44✅.ieqfwLqlFN’

  • 25th April 2014 Sol 611

    Posted by jbridges in Mars Science Laboratory Blog on April 25, 2014 Here is the chosen drill site – Windjana (named after a famous set of rocks in W. Australia which show ancient paintings).

  • From the past to the future of work

    By Stephen Wood, Professor of Management, University of Leicester School of Business. My two edited books, The Transformation of Work? and The Degradation of work?, have been selected for Routledge’s ‘Routledge Revivals’ Series.

  • News archive 2022

    Read news stories from Leicester Law School in 2022.

  • Underwear: a tool for fashioning female identity?

    Read the article "Underwear: a tool for fashioning female identity?" This is part of the Social Worlds project at the University of Leicester.

  • Tuesday 18th September Sol 42

    Posted by jbridges in Mars Science Laboratory Blog on September 18, 2012 We have paused to take a panorama of the landscape: Mt Sharp, crater walls and local terrain before we descend into GlenElg.  This could be one of the most dramatic landscape photographs of the mission.

  • Alumni

    Information for alumni of History at the University of Leicester. Find out how to be informed of current news and events, and how to get a transcript of your marks or replacement certificate.

  • Lecture to focus on social enterprise as a positive way to do business

    The theory, practice and positive benefits to us all of social enterprises will be explored at the next School of Business Dean’s Lecture on 10 May.

  • Contents of display case draw

    8. Beeswax, barley and maize were all used in the processes of creating a manuscript. A feather quill and reed pen were used to put ink on the parchment. An example of quarter sawn book board is also shown.

  • Ahmed Mahdee Salih

    The academic profile of Dr Ahmed Mahdee Salih, Research Associate at University of Leicester

  • Study finds veins on Mars were formed by evaporating ancient lakes

    Mineral veins found in Mars’s Gale Crater were formed by the evaporation of ancient Martian lakes, a new study has shown.

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