We present chemical abundances in K and M red-giant members of the Galactic
bulge derived from high-resolution infrared spectra obtained with the Phoenix
spectrograph on Gemini-South. The elements studied are carbon, nitrogen,
oxygen, sodium, titanium, and iron. The evolution of C and N abundances in the
studied red-giants show that their oxygen abundances represent the original
values with which the stars were born. Oxygen is a superior element for probing
the timescale of bulge chemical enrichment via [O/Fe] versus [Fe/H]. The
[O/Fe]-[Fe/H] relation in the bulge does not follow the disk relation, with
[O/Fe] values falling above those of the disk. Titanium also behaves similarly
to oxygen with respect to iron. Based on these elevated values of [O/Fe] and
[Ti/Fe] extending to large Fe abundances, it is suggested that the bulge
underwent a more rapid chemical enrichment than the halo. In addition, there
are declines in both [O/Fe] and [Ti/Fe] in those bulge targets with the largest
Fe abundances, signifying another source affecting chemical evolution: perhaps
Supernovae of Type Ia. Sodium abundances increase dramatically in the bulge
with increasing metallicity, possibly reflecting the metallicity dependant
yields from supernovae of Type II, although Na contamination from H-burning in
intermediate mass stars cannot be ruled out.Comment: ApJ in pres