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Lunch Hour Lectures - Spring 2011 - Episode 9: From prehistory to the London blitz: foreshore archaeology and a rising river
Lunch Hour Lectures - Spring 2011 - Episode 9: From prehistory to the London blitz: foreshore archaeology and a rising river When the tide is out, the Thames foreshore is the longest archaeological site in London. The remains cover a wide range of our long history and include prehistoric forests, a Bronze Age bridge, Saxon fish traps, Tudor jetties, later shipyards, watermen's causeways, and the hulks of boats, barges and ships. Our most recent study has even found evidence for bomb-strikes from the London Blitz, exactly 70 years ago. Much of this evidence is suffering from the river's increased erosion or by modern redevelopment. The Thames Discovery Programme team is training up a group of committed Londoners to survey the sites on a regular basis, recording the history on the foreshore before its washed away forever. Vintage Podcasts - Lunch Hour Lectures
4
9/27/2023
Lunch Hour Lectures - Autumn 2009 - Episode 9: Why the courts are as important as hospitals to the nation's health
Lunch Hour Lectures - Autumn 2009 - Episode 9: Why the courts are as important as hospitals to the nation's health Professor Genn will focus on the critical ways in which courts support society and the economy and on how they have directly improved standards of medicine practice and healthcare. She will also discuss new evidence about the link between access to justice and health and consider whether much of what turns up in doctors’ surgeries (including requests for anti-depressants) are in fact the results of an inability to access the courts. Vintage Podcasts - Lunch Hour Lectures
3
7/25/2023
Lunch Hour Lectures - Spring 2008 - Episode 9: Hepatitis B, a Neat Little Virus
Lunch Hour Lectures - Spring 2008 - Episode 9: Hepatitis B, a Neat Little Virus Vintage Podcasts - Lunch Hour Lectures
3
7/13/2023