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9196 results for: ‘map’

  • D-Day in the East Midlands Oral History Archive

    Posted by Colin Hyde in Library and Learning Services on May 30, 2024 The 1980s saw many oral history projects start across the UK.

  • Conversations with… Prof. John Bridges

    Posted by ejb71 in Physics and Astronomy Blog on 10 September 2021 Professor John Bridges is a Professor of Planetary Science in the School of Physics and Astronomy. An experienced researcher; Prof.

  • Immersive experience installed in the David Wilson Library, May 2018

    Immersive experience installed in the David Wilson Library, May 2018

  • Juno’s first perijove – may the science commence!

    Posted by Henrik Melin in Leicester to Jupiter: The Juno Mission on August 24, 2016 The Juno spacecraft is today 3 million km from Jupiter, and it has spent its time in the first of two capture orbits about the planet.

  • Moon may have influenced Stonehenge builders says English Heritage

    Lunar standstill in 2024 offers rare opportunity to investigate. English Heritage teams up with leading astronomical experts in UK, including the University of Leicester, and USA

  • SUREFest – Final Internship Presentations

    This summer, the School of Physics and Astronomy has hosted 11 interns working as part of the SURE (summer undergraduate research experience) programme. 

  • Pope Franciss appeal for Poland to welcome refugees may remain unanswered

    Pope Francis’s appeal to Polish people to welcome refugees into the country and to embrace EU integration may remain unanswered, according to an expert from the Department of Politics and International Relations.

  • Alice Munro, Canadian ‘Master’ of the Short Story

    Alice Munro wins Nobel Prize for Literature, 2013

  • A tulip bulb, the value of which would have fed ‘a whole ship’s crew for a twelvemonth’

    Posted by Margaret Maclean in Library Special Collections on April 7, 2017 The tulip, with its bold, eye-catching flowers in a wide variety of gorgeous colours, is in bloom, in many of our spring gardens, making one of their most striking features.

  • Secrets of our ancient animal ancestors may be revealed through oldest DNA sequences

    700 million year-old DNA sequences from ancient animals have been unearthed by researchers at the Universities of Leicester and Warwick, shedding new light on our earliest animal ancestors and how they influenced modern species - including the sponge.

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