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  • Pterosaurs undergo dental examination to reveal clues about diets and lifestyles

    Microscopic analysis of the teeth of pterosaurs has revealed new insights into the diets and behaviours of Earth’s earliest flying reptiles.

  • Adam Kay, Russell Kane and Dame Maggie Aderin-Pocock headline 2024 Literary Leicester festival

    Literary Leicester, the University of Leicester’s annual free literature festival, will return next month.

  • Frederick and Mary Attenborough

    Frederick was our second Principal and under his leadership it expanded rapidly. He, and his wife Mary, lived on the campus with their sons Richard, David and John.

  • Professor Kamlesh Khunti awarded CBE in New Year Honours 2022

    Professor Kamlesh Khunti, Professor of Primary Care Diabetes and Vascular Medicine at the University of Leicester, has been made a Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) for his services to Health in the New Year’s Honours List 2022.

  • Revisiting Holst’s Jupiter a hundred years later

    Reworking of Jupiter from Holst’s Planets suite benefits from insights from a University of Leicester planetary scientist.

  • ESA provides a business boost for Space Park Leicester

    Space Park Leicester has been selected as a new centre to offer the successful business incubation programme for start-ups in the UK, run by the European Space Agency (ESA).

  • Passions of War

    The Passions of War project sought to investigate the influence of war, from the early modern period to the end of the Second World War. Find out more about the project.

  • Leicester link to Nobel Prize winners

    In the latest announcement from the Nobel Prize committee, US academics Jeffrey Hall, Michael Rosbash at Brandeis University, Boston and Mike Young at Rockefeller University, New York, have received the 2017 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for their discoveries of...

  • UK scientists generate electricity from rare element to power future space missions

    Experts have generated electricity from a rare chemical element for the first time which may mean future space missions can be powered for up to 400 years.

  • Andrew Dunn: Page 211

    Academic Librarian.

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