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9146 results for: ‘WordPress响应式自媒体资讯博客主题iux1.2.2爱前端主题✅项目合作 二开均可 TG:saolei44✅.HttLKKVVIXq’

  • MBiolSci Research Project (Cancer Cell Biology)

    Module code: BS4006 This module comprises a full-time, 4 month research project placement: 3 months of lab work and then 1 month for writing the dissertation and project presentation.

  • Garden preview

    Discover all there is to see at the Botanic Garden at the University of Leicester.

  • COMET Trial

    The COMET Trial is funded by the NIHR and is designed to answer the question: Research question: Does whole-body hypothermia to 33.5 ±0.

  • A Chimera?

    Posted by Martin Coffey in Postgraduate Researcher Careers on June 3, 2020 So the lockdown is being lifted piece by piece. Different pace in different countries, even different pace in different countries within the UK.

  • February 10th Sol 182

    Posted by jbridges in Mars Science Laboratory Blog on February 10, 2013 The latest drilling has gone to 6 cm depth and we will use this for CheMin and SAM analyses.

  • 27th April 2015 Sol 968

    Posted by jbridges in Mars Science Laboratory Blog on April 27, 2015 We are situated at Mt. Shields, having driven along Logan’s Run.  I am Geo Science team Lead today, and we are preparing a 2 sol plan.

  • 8th October 2013 Sol 417

    Posted by jbridges in Mars Science Laboratory Blog on October 8, 2013 Our last drive was about 85 m away from  Waypoint 1 towards the SW.  As we progress one of the new ways we image the landscape is with the MAHLI microimager.

  • Cooking Inauthentically: An Experiment with Flaounes – University of Leicester

    Deborah Toner, the Project's PI, describes her first experience of cooking flaounes, a celebration Easter food from Cyprus, the challenge of finding "authentic" ingredients and the sense of occasion created by making a celebration food.

  • Olympus objectives

    See the objectives for the Olympus imaging equipment found in the Advanced Imaging Facility.

  • 2nd January 2016 Sol 1211

    Posted by jbridges in Mars Science Laboratory Blog on January 2, 2016 This HiRISE image taken from Mars Reconaissance Orbiter shows Curiosity in its current position at the margin of the steep slope of the Bagnold dunes.

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