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  1. Mar 18, 2021 · This week, Benjamin Hess ’19, now a graduate student at Yale, published groundbreaking research in the journal Nature Communications, positing that lightning strikes could have provided the phosphorous necessary for life on earth rather than meteorites as previously hypothesized.

  2. Mar 16, 2021 · “ This work helps us understand how life may have formed on Earth and how it could still be forming on other, Earth-like planets,” said lead author Benjamin Hess, a graduate student in Yale’s Department of Earth & Planetary Sciences.

  3. Mar 16, 2021 · Benjamin Hess, School of Earth and Environment. Mr Hess and his mentors were studying an exceptionally large and pristine sample of fulgurite – a rock created when lightning strikes the ground.

  4. Ben is a senior manager within Deloitte Consulting LLP, advising leaders on topics related to pricing and profitability management. He works with clients to deliver commercial transformations that ignite profitable growth and are enabled by advanced analytics and data-driven decision-making.

  5. Mar 16, 2021 · "This work helps us understand how life may have formed on Earth and how it could still be forming on other, Earth-like planets," said lead author Benjamin Hess, a graduate student in Yale's...

  6. Mar 23, 2021 · To Earth science now and the origins of life on our planet; and when Benjamin Hess was a student at Wheaton University in Illinois, he had no idea that a local storm would change the course of his career and produce a remarkable piece of geology that has shed light, or rather, lightning, on how life may have got started here.

  7. Dr. Benjamin Hess. Dr. Hess is a licensed and board certified physician by the American Board of Family Medicine. He is a graduate of Clemson University, attended medical school at The American University of the Caribbean School of Medicine, and completed his residency training in Family Medicine at Anderson Area Medical Center in Anderson, SC. Dr.