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Benjamin Busch

    Benjamin Busch's literary voice is forged in the crucible of diverse experiences, blending his military service and acting career with a profound exploration of identity and memory. He writes with a raw honesty, delving into the complex impacts of life and conflict on the human spirit. Busch's unique perspective offers readers a penetrating look at the nature of experience and its lasting imprint. His work invites deep reflection on the intricate tapestry of life.

    Material senescence
    Palimpsest
    Impact of grain coats on quartz overgrowth and Reservoir properties
    Dust to Dust
    • 2020

      Dust to Dust

      • 320 pages
      • 12 hours of reading
      3.6(15)Add rating

      Exploring the intertwined themes of life, landscape, and memory, this memoir reflects on the contrasts between childhood adventures and adult revelations, as well as the experiences of farm life and the battlefield. Authored by Benjamin Busch, a decorated Marine Corps officer and the son of novelist Frederick Busch, it offers profound insights into mortality and our temporal existence, positioning itself alongside the works of Tim O'Brien and Annie Dillard in its emotional depth and literary merit.

      Dust to Dust
    • 2017

      Impact of grain coats on quartz overgrowth and Reservoir properties

      Dissertationsschrift

      • 164 pages
      • 6 hours of reading

      The book explores the influence of grain coating phases on reservoir quality through syntaxial overgrowth cementation. It delves into reaction kinetics as a method for modeling cement phase development over time. Additionally, it incorporates algorithms that address compaction behavior, porosity, and permeability to enhance reservoir quality modeling. The text also examines how sub-vertical deformation bands can compartmentalize reservoirs, affecting bed-parallel permeability and preserving geochemical changes.

      Impact of grain coats on quartz overgrowth and Reservoir properties
    • 2014

      What happens to human artifice after the fact? A search for an answer to this question is chronicled in Palimpsest, a photo book documenting the author’s archaeological investigations of abandoned sites in and around Berlin. Portrayed elegantly in black and white, Nature is cast as a pivotal actor in the palimpsest of human creation. Foreword by Manuel Wischnewski titled “Nascent Places”. Published simultaneously with Material Senescence (2014). First Edition.

      Palimpsest
    • 2014

      Borrowing a term from biology, the author uses senescence to describe the ecological aging of architectural fabric in Material Senescence. Text and photographs draw from instances of failing architecture in Berlin to speculate upon the unpredictable breaking down of materials in the built environment. Foreword by Mark Minkjan titled "Transience: the Nature of Architecture". Published simultaneously with Palimpsest (2014). First Edition.

      Material senescence