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SEM-EDS analysis of the pottery discovered in the prehistoric site Koukonisi, Lemnos.
Moriah Rowat & Jasmine Guillot-Deng

This exhibit explores the legacy of Bertrand Russell through a selection of archival objects which relate to the social and political upheavals of 1968.

Cholera in the Age of Science and Revolution
Showcasing the work of students in English 3NN3
[Compiled by Char and Gloria]
A digital exhibition examining the testimonies of four Ukrainian women during the initial phase of the Russia-Ukraine conflict. Through their experiences of caregiving, flight, cultural survival, and trauma, this project reveals how war reshapes identity, language, and memory.
Our exhibit showcases a variety of artefacts from ancient Mesopotamia, in order to demonstrate the complexity of socioeconomic factors in Mesopotamian societies, and how these factors contributed to their success and prosperity.

Memory and Legacy - Obituaries and the Remembrance of Judith Robinson
The historical and influential artistic discoveries in Ancient Mesopotamia. The building blocks of civilizations and exploring Assyria as an artistic superpower in the ancient world. Importantly the artistic inventions of the Assyrian and Babylonian Empires and the emphasis on writing all the way to mythology.

The exhibit proposes an overview of the Arabic Calligraphy with a focus on the Andalusian Maghribi style, and Al-Qandusi (d 1278/1861) as a calligrapher. And the objective of the proposed primary source is to explore the Prophetology and Calligraphy in Morrocco during the Nineteenth Century, through the life and the work of Al-Qandussi. Various posters, by calligrapher Muhammad Bin Al-Qasim al-Qundusi, were obtained from Wikimedia Commons. Among them is a large calligraphic representation of “Allah” (God in Arabic) from the 19th century, on display at the courtyard of the Zawiya of Moulay Idris II in Fes, Morocco.
Chessmen Exhibit, Timothy Hoogsteen, 2PQ3.

Exploring what it means to be a parent during a time of crisis; how adults protect, comfort, and explain war to children amid extreme uncertainty, as well as the effects of war and trauma on parent-child relationships, supported through testimonials from the Russia-Ukraine war.
Margaret Lyons was a broadcaster, an executive, a leader, a wife and a mother. She is also the reason Lyons New Media Centre exists today. We dedicate this website to her memory and her legacy.
4HP3 2023

Exploring the journey of women’s fashion from the structured elegance of the 1900s to the bold, liberated styles of the 1920s.
This exhibition brings together materials from the Air India Flight 182 archive, tracing the public inquiry process gaining track around 2005 and culminating in the Prime Minister’s 2010 apology. These documents reveal the exchanges between the organized family members of the victims, government institutions, and public opinion. Crucially, they show family members denouncing the failures of Canadian institutions to prevent the tragedy, respond with care to the victims’ families, and conduct a thorough investigation.
Completed by Diogo, Spencer and Danyal
From the writings of Francis Bacon and Vitruvius to the 20th-century environmental science of Rachel Carson, the history of science has been given shape by monumental achievements in writing. These books have served as milestones which changed the course of human affairs; their discoveries (and false starts) continue to shape our social and technological discourse to this day. Here we present a first-hand look at some of these iconic texts, dating from the 17th to the 20th century.
This digital exhibit explores the role of propaganda in the Russia-Ukraine War through personal testimonies collected by the Narratives of War project. By analyzing individual accounts and media artifacts, the exhibit examines how information is weaponized, how narratives are constructed, and how ordinary people experience and resist ideological manipulation in times of conflict.

Celebrating women's contributions to printing and book art in Britain, Ireland, and France during the hand-press period.