A new era for the science of ageing
LJMU collaborates to accelerate real world benefits from laboratories
LJMU collaborates to accelerate real world benefits from laboratories
Read more about how community pharmacies could be making more of a difference to public health in local communities and stamping out inequalities.
The university has begun work on a series of major projects to continue the transformation of our Byrom Street site for the benefit of students and staff.
Excitement and praise for English graduate Aimee Walsh's first novel Exile
New research suggests blue eyed humans better than brown eyed in seeing in dark
Making footprints without feet: Lungfish moving on land leaves unusual traces says scientist.
An international team of scientists, led by the China University of Geosciences in Beijing and including palaeontologists from the Liverpool John Moores University, has shed new light on some unusual dinosaur tracks from northern China. The tracks appear to have been made by four-legged sauropod dinosaurs yet only two of their feet have left prints behind.
A £330,000 funding boost will help researchers at Liverpool John Moores University progress their work on pioneering improvements in mass finishing technologies, the use of which is expanding rapidly across a range of sectors including aerospace, autosports, automotive, pharmaceutical, medical device, tool making and general engineering.
The school of nursing and allied health at LJMU is hosting international delegates from the Netherlands, Belgium, Hungary and Portugal as part of their commitment to HELIUM
Renowned for their noiseless dive, the kingfisher’s iconic beak-shape has inspired the design of high speed bullet trains. Now scientists have tested beak-shape among some of the birds’ 114 species found world-wide, to assess which shape is the most hydrodynamic.