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14134 results for: ‘dede内核小说网站整站源码带手机版 小说采集工具 搭建教程✅项目合作 二开均可 TG:saolei44✅.hQYZKgIaAZWXFY’

  • People

    The International Ocean Discovery Program (IODP) team at Leicester comprises an active research community and the Leicester branch of the European Petrophysics Consortium (EPC).

  • Frost Fairs on the Thames

    Posted by Margaret Maclean in Library Special Collections on December 1, 2015 Engraved portrait of John Evelyn by Francesco Bartolozzi. From the Fairclough Collection, EP 36, Box 7, p. 590.

  • What is oral history?

    History at the University of Leicester - Building and Enriching Shared Heritages project. Find out how Oral History is defined and how it is useful for capturing stories, as a source of evidence and for investigating what people did and thought.

  • Physics and Astronomy Blog: Showcasing the cutting-edge research and diverse scientific community in

    Showcasing the cutting-edge research and diverse scientific community in the School of Physics and Astronomy.

  • Arch-I-Scan blog Museum of London Archaeology photography – University of Leicester

    Arch-I-Scan project's first session of pottery sherd photography at the Museum of London Archaeology

  • Ulrika Maude: Samuel Beckett and Medicine

    Find out more about a free online event celebrating the publication of Ulrika Maude's book 'Samuel Beckett and Medicine', published by Cambridge University Press in 2025.

  • The king's grave

    Richard III was buried at the west end of the church choir, in front of the southern choir stall. This location is slightly ambiguous. Although the feet and one lower leg bone (left fibula) were missing Richard III’s skeleton was otherwise complete.

  • Access our collections

    How to access our Archives and Special Collections

  • NASA planetary research expert to deliver exclusive talk at Space Park Leicester

    ‘Assessing the Evidence for Active Basaltic Volcanism on Venus: Current Limitations and Future Prospects’ will take place at Space Park Leicester on 10 January at 2pm

  • Rotting fish help solve mystery of how soft tissue fossils form

    One of the finest examples of such fossils includes a Cretaceous-era octopus of the extinct genus Keuppia unearthed in Lebanon, estimated to be at least 94 million years old. Sarah Gabbott is a Professor of Palaeobiology and co-author of the paper.

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