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University of Leeds. The University of Leeds is a public research university in Leeds, West Yorkshire, England. It was established in 1874 as the Yorkshire College of Science. In 1884 it merged with the Leeds School of Medicine (established 1831) and was renamed Yorkshire College.
Liz Kershaw, journalist and radio DJ (Textiles, 1978) [10] Alice Levine, Co-host of My Dad Wrote a Porno and former BBC Radio 1 DJ. Melanie McFadyean (1950–2023), journalist and lecturer. Peter Morgan, screenwriter (Fine Art, 1985) [13] Jamie Morton, Co-host of My Dad Wrote a Porno.
The faculty entered research into the units of assessment (UOA) for Biological Sciences and Pre-clinical and Human Biological Sciences. In Biological Sciences 20% of outputs were rated 4* (World Class) and 40% 3* (Internationally Excellent), for 107 category A staff. In the Pre-clinical unit, 20% were rated 4* and 45% 3*, for 72 category A staff.
Sheena Radford. Sheena Elizabeth Radford is a British biophysicist, and Astbury Professor of Biophysics and a Royal Society Research Professor in the Astbury Centre for Structural Molecular Biology, School of Molecular and Cellular Biology at the University of Leeds. [1][2][3][4] Radford is the Associate Editor of the Journal of Molecular Biology.
astbury .leeds .ac .uk /people /dr-sarah-harris /. Sarah Anne Harris is a British physicist who is an Associate Professor of Biological Physics at the University of Leeds. [ 1][ 2] Her research investigates biomolecular simulations and the topology of DNA. In particular, she makes use of molecular dynamics to explore how DNA responds to stress.
The Centre for History and Philosophy of Science is a research centre devoted to the historical and philosophical study of science, technology and medicine, based in the School of Philosophy, Religion and History of Science, at the University of Leeds in West Yorkshire, England. The Centre – previously known as the Division of History and ...
Crumpton holds a BSc in ecology from the University of Leeds, and an MSc in palaeobiology from the University of Bristol, for which he was awarded the Geologists Association's Curry Prize. He gained his PhD from the University of Cambridge with research undertaken at the Department of Zoology.
Hay started his career at the chemical pathology department at the University of Leeds. He became Professor of Environmental Toxicology. [when?] [4] He provided assistance to the forming of the Chemical Weapons Convention in 1993, becoming international law in 1997. He works in the Leeds Institute of Cardiovascular and Metabolic Medicine.