Search

24504 results for: ‘黑点云DIY商城系统✅项目合作 二开均可 TG:saolei44✅.RJQEsALWwoQlGqE’

  • Forensic analysis using micro-CT

    The forensic analysis of the Greyfriars bones by micro-computer X-ray tomography (micro-CT) is the first time that this advanced technique has been applied to an archaeological investigation and was crucial to the investigation.

  • Swap a component

    Swap a component in Sitecore.

  • Section 1 - Definitions

    Read Section 1 of our Statutes, entitled Definitions. This section defines the terms used in the Statutes and their specific meaning within the context of the Statutes.

  • Knowing where to look

    Whilst nothing of the friary remains above ground today, its site has never actually been lost, despite one early map of Leicester, the 1610 Speed map, getting its location wrong.

  • Bradgate Park Fieldschool Season 5 2019

    The fifth season of the Bradgate Park Fieldschool ran from the 20th May to the 5th July 2019, with a public open day on the 29th June. This year, we focussed on two areas of excavation: Bradgate House and a possible medieval settlement to the east.

  • Rankings

    Find out where we rank in various higher education league tables, and get further information on rankings for research and teaching.

  • Our building

    The Engineering Building at the University of Leicester is widely regarded as one of the most architecturally important buildings of its era.

  • Astronomers see “warm” glow of Uranus’s rings

    The rings of Uranus are invisible to all but the largest telescopes — they weren’t even discovered until 1977 — and they stand out as surprisingly bright in new heat images of the planet taken by two large telescopes in the high deserts of Chile.

  • Senate regulation 10: Regulations governing academic appeals (for Boards of Examiners until 31 October 2024)

    Read Senate regulation 10: Regulations governing academic appeals (for Boards of Examiners until 31 October 2024).

  • Solar System lightshows to be probed by Leicester astronomers

    Team from University of Leicester has been given observation time on the James Webb Space Telescope for two projects that will study the aurora on two neighbouring gas giants, Saturn and Uranus

Back to top
MENU