Federal grant
funds fossil preparation at OU-HCOM
Faculty member
awarded $180,000 from NSF for specimen facility
By Matt Bates
November 11,
2009
Nancy Stevens,
Ph.D.,
assistant professor of biomedical sciences at
OU-HCOM, was recently awarded a grant for
$180,000 from the National Science Foundation
(NSF) to fund the creation of a university
laboratory for fossil preparation and imaging.
“Having an
in-house specimen preparation facility removes
the most significant obstacle to my research
productivity: the cost and delay of off-site
specimen preparation,” Stevens says.
Paleobiology is
a rapidly growing field, which Stevens
attributes to the increasing interest in climate
change and the related necessity to understand
environmental trends over time. Despite this
growth, Stevens explained, many paleobiology
research projects face delays and increased
expenses because fossils must be prepared
off-site, at locations such as the Smithsonian
National Museum of Natural History in
Washington, D.C., and Stony Brook University in
New York.
The new fossil
services at Ohio University will be housed in
existing laboratory space, with the grant paying
for equipment and personnel. The facility, which
will allow for the onsite preparation of nearly
all specimens needed for research, will be
available to faculty and students from many
different academic units, including the Heritage College
of Osteopathic Medicine’s Department of
Biomedical Sciences, and the Departments of
Geology and Biological Sciences in the College
of Arts and Sciences.
“Having a
centralized facility for specimen preparation
will also provide a significant opportunity for
interaction, exchange of ideas, and for
developing collaborative studies across
different disciplines within paleobiology,”
Stevens says.
To teach OHIO
students about paleobiological research,
Stevens—along with OU-HCOM assistant professors
of biomedical sciences Patrick O’Connor,
Ph.D., and Susan Williams, Ph.D.,
both co-principal investigators on the
grant—plans to hold events in the facility for
undergraduates.
According to
Stevens, the facility will be used both for
preparing specimens, which involves removing
fossils from surrounding rock, and for various
imaging techniques, including 3-D imaging,
microscopic imaging and the assembly of
photographic plates for publication.
Along with
equipment, the grant will pay for a full-time
specimen preparation technician, whose work will
speed up the research process, Stevens explains.
The funding for
this facility comes from the American Recovery
and Reinvestment Act, passed earlier this year
and is part of an NSF program that only awards
laboratory funding to early career scientists.
This government
funding augments the university’s current
research capabilities without detracting from
existing university initiatives, according to
Stevens. “Ohio University and OU-HCOM are both
strong proponents of research, so we have been
able to leverage facilities and personnel that
already exist to go after funding opportunities
that will allow us to do more.”