Search

7109 results for: ‘帝国全仿3366小游戏flash小游戏✅项目合作 二开均可 TG:saolei44✅.xhGEzgGvUzjfK’

  • Leaders In Healthcare 18: Chief Medical Officers Panel

    Posted by Nate in Medical Leadership in the Foundations on November 15, 2018   I’m lucky enough to be spending half of this week at Leaders In Healthcare 2018, a national conference from the Faculty of Medical Leadership and Management and the BMJ.

  • 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.

  • Dismemberment in Prehistory – Not Just for the Criminally Insane. By Shane McCorristine

    Posted by Emma Battell Lowman in The Power of the Criminal Corpse on November 23, 2015 Francisco Goya, “Great deeds! Against the dead!” (1810s). Source: Wikimedia Commons. For as long as humans have been around we have cut up, hacked, butchered, and mutilated corpses.

  • Tequila: Pulque’s Friend, Cousin, Usurper?

    Deborah Toner discusses the relationship and rivalry between pulque and tequila in Mexican history, and summarises a recently published book by Marie Sarita Gaytan, Tequila: Distilling the Spirit of Mexico (Stanford University Press, 2014)

  • 12th September 2017 Sol 1814 – Curiosity’s View Across Gale Crater

    Posted by jbridges in Mars Science Laboratory Blog on September 12, 2017 View from Vera Rubin Ridge   The Curiosity Rover has reached an elevation of 300 metres above our landing site.

  • Festival examines what the anti-apartheid picket can teach human rights defenders

    Dr Gavin Brown from the Department of Geography will be giving a talk on Tuesday 8 December at 6.

  • 1st February 2018 Sol 1952 Vera Rubin Ridge and Scotland on Mars

    Mars Science Laboratory

  • Parties and Politics in Britain, 1914-1974

    Module code: HS3625 Module Outline British politics went through major changes during the two World Wars and in the decades after them.

  • Exploring explosions in space

    Exploring gamma-ray bursts, the enormous, distant explosions in space.

  • Tiny, ancient fossil shows evidence of the breath of life

    A beautifully preserved fossil crustacean, 430 million years old, displays its respiratory organs in exquisite detail

Back to top
MENU