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17389 results for: ‘汇汇通微盘usdt支付完美运营2次开发版 完整数据 K线正常 3种语言✅项目合作 二开均可 TG:saolei44✅.thvRoPtScIOka’

  • Britain’s largest ‘Sea Dragon’ discovered in Rutland

    Ichthyosaurs first appeared around 250 million years ago and went extinct 90 million years ago. They were an extraordinary group of marine reptiles that varied in size from 1 to more than 25 metres in length, and resembled dolphins in general body shape.

  • Vile Bodies: The photograph! The painting! The half-finished book!

    A biographical article by Duncan McClaren on Waugh's first marriage and the writing of Vile Bodies.

  • On multi-sited research and mono-sited (nationalist) memory

    Posted by Christian De Vito in Carceral Archipelago on May 26, 2015 Addressing convict transportation – the key feature in the Carceral Archipelago project – implies multi-sited research, that is, research in archives located in different places (and countries/continents).

  • Digging for Britain: Leicestershire & Rutland archaeology projects to feature on BBC 

    Projects led by Leicester archaeologists have been showcased on the new series of BBC Two’s primetime TV series Digging for Britain.

  • Undergraduate courses

    We are one of the largest history departments in the UK.

  • Remote Sensing for Geographers

    Module code: GY3353  This module builds on the foundations laid down in year 2 to explore how remotely sensed data and images are exploited in geographical applications as well as instruction in radar and lidar remote sensing, new and exciting aspects of Earth observation.

  • Seminar to examine how the media represents tween girls

    The controversial way in which ‘tween’ girls are represented in the media will be explored at a free public event at our University taking place on Friday 26 May.

  • Two different schools of thought discuss light

    An event which examines the relationship between science and religion and their alternative views on the subject of light will take place on Wednesday 18 November at The Gatehouse Chaplaincy Centre, University Rd from 5.30pm – 8.00pm.

  • Does it make a difference if a writer is male or female

    A spirited debate about whether gender plays a part in literature is due to take place this week as part of the eighth Literary Leicester festival, running until 14 November on campus.

  • Heart professor stars in BBC documentary

    A leading Leicester professor is to appear in a BBC documentary after finding a link between red meat and heart disease. Professor Toru Suzuki (pictured) from the Department of Cardiovascular Sciences was asked to conduct an experiment looking at how steak affects the body.

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