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9434 results for: ‘风车 IM聊天 即时通讯✅项目合作 二开均可 TG:saolei44✅.GizkIRDrzwyAvMU’

  • Research Outcomes

    The AIDAIM Centre's research outcomes, the forefront of new research, scholarship and knowledge.

  • Protection for Whom? Aboriginal rights in the Swan River Colony

    Posted by Carrie Crockett in Carceral Archipelago on May 15, 2016 by Kellie Moss   Captain Stirling’s exploring party 50 miles up the Swan River, Western Australia, March, 1827 http://nla.gov.au/nla.

  • Student wins prestigious nursing award

    Student Bethan Jones has clinched a prestigious award from the Nursing Times

  • The cell cycle, mitosis and meiosis

    The cell cycle is the four stage process in which the cell becomes two cells. We provide academic materials for learning purposes for various levels of education.

  • Music, Sound and the Moving Image

    Posted by Andrew Dunn in Social Sciences and Humanities Librarians’ Blog on January 25, 2011 We now have full text access to the journal Music, Sound and the Moving Image from 2007 onwards.  This title can be found on Leicester e-link.

  • Team to take on the Three Peaks Challenge in 24 hours

    A team of students is preparing to climb the highest peaks in Scotland, England and Wales to raise awareness of mental health issues.

  • Friday 25th January 2013 Sol 168

    Posted by jbridges in Mars Science Laboratory Blog on January 25, 2013 One of the features of the MAHLI microimager is that it has a set of LED lights around the lens aperture.

  • jbridges: Page 17

    This blog is a record of my experiences and work during the Mars Science Laboratory mission, from the preparation, landing on August 5th 2012 Pacific Time, and onwards...I will also post updates about our other Mars work on meteorites, ExoMars and new missions.

  • Wednesday 17th October Sol 70

    Posted by jbridges in Mars Science Laboratory Blog on October 17, 2012 We go on a field trip to the Mojave Desert.  This area of California contains alluvial fans, volcanic rocks, ancient lakes and hydrothermally altered rocks.

  • World’s first picture of the molecular machinery that makes cilia beat

    A picture of the structures that power human cilia – the tiny, hairlike projections that line our airways, has been produced by scientists for the first time.

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