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  • Contact us

    Learn how to get in touch with the team working in the Advanced Imaging Facility in the Core Biotechnology Services.

  • Unravelling the Minion genome

    Based on what we know of the minions from the popular Despicable Me films – and the Minions movie current playing at cinemas – they could, in theory, have a complex genetic make-up similar to humans, according to Natural Sciences students Krisho Manoharan and Ruth Sang Jones.

  • University of Leicester to mark World Diabetes Day

    People are being invited to learn more about Type 2 diabetes from University experts at a specialist centre in Leicester to mark an international awareness campaign.

  • Out of this world art needed for iconic space hub’s new mission patch

    Space Park Leicester invites inviting children, young people or adults with a love of space to help design their new mission patch.

  • Entomology fieldtrip turns into a once in a lifetime opportunity

    A University of Leicester researcher has witnessed a once in a lifetime experience on a trip to the United States.

  • How medieval people named their animals is explored in new book 

    The relationship between medieval people and their pets is the topic of the latest book by the University of Leicester’s Dr Ben Parsons. Introducing Medieval Animal Names explores what names medieval people gave to the animals with which they lived and worked.

  • Work Opportunities

    Page describing opportunities for undergraduate chemists to gain paid research experience during their degree studies.

  • Country Houses and the British Empire: How Imperialism Transformed Britain’s Colonial Countryside

    Explore the fascinating histories of Britain’s colonial houses and their links to the British Empire.

  • fore(e)dialogue journal

    for(e)dialogue is a publication project of Media and Communication at Leicester, organised by our PhD students.

  • Cat-ching criminals with DNA from pet hairs

    Cat hair could be the purr-fect way to catch criminals, according to researchers from the University of Leicester.

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