Understanding past populations
Why our ancestors could hold the key to early diagnosis of bone disease
Why our ancestors could hold the key to early diagnosis of bone disease
International specialists in the field of sport coaching at LJMU visited Malta this month, rounding off the academic year, as they brought together UK-based MSc Sport Coaching students with their Maltese counterparts on the MSc International Sport Coaching programme.
Team explores how tiny traces could help crack criminal cases
Electric vehicles (EVs) are an important part of meeting global goals on climate change, but with more than half of their emissions coming in the manufacturing phase, product duration is key to ensuring EVs remain low-carbon emitters.
Student organised festival receives 3,000 films from 15 countries
Scientists and historians have joined forces to create detailed virtual images of what could be the head of Robert the Bruce, reconstructed from the cast of a human skull held by the Hunterian Museum.
An LJMU astronomy researcher has played an integral role in the investigation of one of the most observed and puzzling objects ever discovered.
In a new study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA, an international research team, led by Uppsala University with co-author Linus Girdland-Flink of LJMU, discovered kin relationships among Stone Age individuals buried in megalithic tombs on Ireland and in Sweden.
Bursaries, scholarships and grants to students top £10million for the first time as cost-of-living bites
One of the driest places on Earth has intermittently been a 'green corridor' for human migration due to historical periods of increased rainfall, according to new research.