Search

9460 results for: ‘小说网站,小说源码,微信支付,微信登陆,小说APP✅项目合作 二开均可 TG:saolei44✅.BaqJhDlbgyWuss’

  • Call For Papers: Museological Review Issue 27

    A Call for Papers for the 27th issue of the Museological Review journal, which will look at museums as spaces of rootedness and response-ability.

  • What Business Schools could learn from My Local Bakery

    Posted by Martin Parker in School of Business Blog on January 29, 2014 Professor Martin Parker, Director of Research at the School, challenges the arguments underpinning mainstream accounts of Business and Management within his recently published co-edited collection.

  • A Certain Glamour: Evelyn Waugh and Nostalgic Fashion – University of Leicester

    Evelyn Waugh's 'Let Us Return to the Nineties,' and a reading of nostalgic fashion from the 1890s to the 1990s

  • Andrew Dunn: Page 18

    Academic Librarian.

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

    Academic and staff blogs from the University of Leicester

  • Patrick Heslop-Harrison

    The academic profile of Professor Patrick Heslop-Harrison, Professor of Plant Cell Biology and Molecular Cytogenetics at University of Leicester

  • Topics

    Genetics Genetics 3D close up of DNA strand. 0 Developmental genetics Developmental genetics Pipette in petri dishes. 100 DNA, genes and chromosomes DNA, genes and chromosomes Abstract image of DNA strand.

  • College of Life Sciences Imaging Steering group

    The University of Leicester Imaging Steering group oversees the use and maintenance of current imaging equipment within the College of Life Sciences as well as investigating the potential to acquire new equipment that will enhance world-leading research.

  • About us

    The Centre for Urban History (CUH) at The University of Leicester has an international reputation in study of towns and cities, producing research that has a global reach.

  • UK scientists generate electricity from rare element to power future space missions

    Experts have generated electricity from a rare chemical element for the first time which may mean future space missions can be powered for up to 400 years.

Back to top
MENU