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  • Social Sciences and Humanities Librarians’ Blog: Academic and staff blogs from the University of Lei

    Academic and staff blogs from the University of Leicester

  • Andrew Dunn: Page 16

    Academic Librarian.

  • Research Resources

    Our staff and students have the opportunity to work with a fantastic array of primary material, hosted by Special Collections.

  • Colin Hyde

    Colin Hyde manages the East Midlands Oral History Archive, based in Special Collections.

  • Three-eyed distant relative of insects and crustaceans reveals amazing detail of early animal evolution

    Scientists from the University of Leicester and Yunnan Key Laboratory for Palaeobiology use cutting edge scanning technology to reconstruct ‘fossil monster’ that lived half a billion years ago, filling a gap in our understanding of the evolution of arthropods such as insects...

  • Babies born at the limits of viability

    Only 1 in 500 babies are born before 24 weeks' of pregnancy however, they make up around a fifth of all baby deaths. This work aims to improve care for babies born at this extremely early stage of pregnancy particularly around consistent determination of signs of life

  • University of Leicester Archive: Selection Policy

    selection policy for the university of Leicester Archives

  • Petrophysicist joins ocean drilling research project investigating the origins of life

    On 26 October 2015, the RSS James Cook (pictured) set sail from Southampton on route to the middle of the Atlantic Ocean. Dr Sally Morgan from the Department of Geology at Leicester, is a petrophysicist within the international team of scientists who are on-board the vessel.

  • Researchers make sand that flows uphill

    Paper published in 'Nature Communications' details how applying magnetic forces to individual 'microroller' particles spurs collective motion—with counterintuitive results

  • Are museums ‘safe spaces for debate’? Not always…

    Posted by Robin Clarke in School of Museum Studies Blog on September 6, 2017 I keep hearing people talk about museums being ‘safe spaces for debate’, and this always makes me feel a little uncomfortable.

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