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9613 results for: ‘map’

  • Geographer to receive national award for promoting diversity in teaching

    The efforts of Dr Margaret Byron (pictured) from the Department of Geography to bring the subjects of race and diversity into geography education have been recognised by a prestigious professional body.

  • Diabetes professors support ban on junk food adverts

    Junk food advertising aimed at children has “no place in a fit and proper society”, according to a leading diabetes expert in light of a further clampdown.

  • Nick Cummins achieves double sporting success

    Nick Cummins|Sports scholar Nick Cummins wins league with Leicester Tigers Wheelchair Rugby Team and gets selected for Great Britain.

  • World-renowned sociologist to deliver Anthropocene lecture

    Professor Bruno Latour, the award-winning and renowned sociologist, philosopher and anthropologist, will deliver a lecture on the Anthropocene at the University of Leicester on Monday 3 June 2019.

  • £1.3 million grant for global atmosphere research

    Dr Eloise Marais from our School of Physics and Astronomy has secured a European Research Council (ERC) grant of more than £1 million to advance her crucial research into the global upper troposphere.

  • Centre offers organisations a route to sustainable success

    The University of Leicester has assembled a team of experts devoted to helping organisations become more sustainable.

  • Exhibition by Leicester-based artist and teacher at Attenborough Arts Centre

    A new exhibition at the Attenborough Arts Centre will showcase the work of a local artist and teacher who has been an inspiring influence on students at the Centre.

  • Neptunes weather studied by Leicester scientist

    Dr Sarah Casewell (pictured) of the Department of Physics and Astronomy has been involved in a study to examine the weather on Neptune.

  • Earth history opens a new chapter

    An international group of scientists has proposed that fallout from hundreds of nuclear weapons tests in the late 1940s to early 1960s could be used to mark the dawn of a new geological age in Earth history – the Anthropocene.

  • Heritage destruction in conflict zones offers archaeological opportunities

    An international archaeological team co-led by Leicester researchers is investigating an historic site devastated by conflict in Lebanon - and has demonstrated it is possible to obtain original and important information from heritage sites that have been devastated by...

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