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  • 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

  • Caribbean Journeys

    Caribbean Journeys was a Nottingham based community-arts project co-directed by Kelsi Delaney and Sofia Aatkar in collaboration with Museumand: The Caribbean National Heritage Museum. The project aimed to preserve the travel stories of the Gedling Caribbean Elders group.

  • Aims and strategies

    We are proud to be one of the world’s leading research-intensive universities, elite in the excellence of our research, yet distinctive for the genuine synergy between our research and teaching.

  • Medicine, science and technology

    Our expertise spans the breadth of medicine, science and technology, with specialisms in medicine and biosciences, environmental sustainability, materials and transport.

  • Exploring explosions in space

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

  • University of Leicester professor speaks to Government Select Committee about alternative to antibiotics

    University of Leicester’s Professor of Microbiology Martha Clokie, spoke to MPs about the potential use of phages to fight bacterial infections.

  • Leicester’s commitment to sustainability leads to world rankings rise

    The University of Leicester has shot up more than 100 places in a league table which ranks the sustainable credentials of universities around the globe.

  • Leicester cancer scientist elected to top role in US Radiation Research Society

    A leading radiation cancer expert from Leicester is set to become the next Vice-President of an esteemed international research society.

  • Midlands Innovation announces plans for technology transfer

    Midlands Innovation, a group of eight universities and one of the UK’s most influential academic collaborations, has launched its plan for collaboration in technology transfer. The announcement was made at an event held at The Shard, London.

  • Red squirrel and human leprosy link found at English medieval archaeological site

    New evidence from medieval archaeological sites shows that English red squirrels once served as an important host for Mycobacterium leprae (M. leprae) strains also responsible for leprosy in humans.

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