Florida Tech Professor Mark Bush Earns NSF Funding

By  //  December 22, 2013

National Science Foundation Funding

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In summer 2015, Bryan Valencia will organize a month-long workshop for Peruvian students in geological and paleoecological techniques to be taught by the research team. (Live Science image)

BREVARD COUNTY, FLORIDA — Mark Bush, Florida Institute of Technology professor of biological sciences, recently received funding from the National Science Foundation to support an interdisciplinary collaboration with Duke University, University of Nebraska, University of Texas and Wake Forest University.

Bush’s $189,195 award will support his team’s study of Amazonian biodiversity.

“The team will investigate the impact that the geological processes such as mountain building, erosion, and river and soil formation have had on the origins of Amazonian biodiversity,” said Bush.

Part of Florida Tech’s portion of the funding will support Bryan Valencia, a post-doctoral Fellow, for two years.

“The team will investigate the impact that the geological processes such as mountain building, erosion, and river and soil formation have had on the origins of Amazonian biodiversity,” said Mark Bush, Florida Institute of Technology professor of biological sciences.

Mark Bush
Mark Bush

He will investigate and compare the fossil pollen history of ancient sediments exposed in Amazonian riverside cliffs.

In summer 2015, Valencia will organize a month-long workshop for Peruvian students in geological and paleoecological techniques to be taught by the research team.

Originally from Cusco, Peru, Valencia earned his master’s degree at Florida Tech in 2006 and is currently the paleoecology laboratory manager at the university.