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Adam R. Heinrich, Ph.D.

  • Associate Professor

Department: History and Anthropology

Office: James and Marlene Howard Hall

Phone: 732-263-5509

Email: aheinric@monmouth.edu


Dr. Heinrich is an archaeologist with a wide array of research interests and experiences which allow him to bring cross-disciplinary methods and perspectives to his research and teaching. His main foci are in historical archaeology and zooarchaeology with particular interest in exploring historic adaptations to new environments and developing market systems. Dr. Heinrich also has extensive experience working with material culture including the use of GIS to identify how artifacts can reveal market connections across colonial New Jersey and the Hudson River Valley of New York. Current research also includes studies of environmental influences on livestock use in the northeast USA as well as advocating for a stronger taphonomic methodology in historical zooarchaeology.

Education

Ph.D., Rutgers University

Research Interests

Historical and prehistoric archaeology; Historical and prehistoric zooarchaeology; Cultural and environmental variation in husbandry and meat consumption; Taphonomy; African and European diaspora and cultural contact; 17th-19th century commemoration; Osteology/Forensics, Archaeobotany (macrobotanicals); Experimental archaeology; Development of mercantile systems; Consumerism in archaeology; Material culture and social process

Books

Book Chapters

Heinrich, Adam R. and Carmel Schrire. 2014. Faunal Analysis and the Development of the VOC Meat Industry at the Cape. In Historical Archaeology in South Africa: Material Culture of the Dutch East India Company at the Cape. Carmel Schrire, editor, pp. 65-99. Walnut Creek, California, Left Coast Press, Inc.

Heinrich, Adam R. and Carmel Schrire. 2011. Colonial Fauna at the Cape of Good Hope: A Proxy for Colonial Impact on Indigenous People. In The Importance of Material Things, Volume 2. Julie Schablitsky and Mark Leone, editors, pp. 121-141. Society for Historical Archaeology.

Scholarly Articles

Heinrich, Adam R. and Teresa Bulger. In prep. The Archaeology of Hannah Glover, an Early 19th-Century Quaker in New Jersey. Historical Archaeology.

Heinrich, Adam R. and Michael J. Gall. 2021. Zooarchaeology and GIS: Enslaved and Free Black Diet at a Late Eighteenth- to Mid-Nineteenth-Century Delaware Farm, New Castle County, Delaware, United States. International Journal of Historical Archaeology. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10761-021-00622-7

Heinrich, Adam R. 2021. The Archaeology of Morris Cohen, A Jewish Farmer’s Victory over a Groundhog in Nineteenth-Century Green Brook, New Jersey. New Jersey Studies 7(2):108-131. DOI: https://doi.org/10.14713/njs.v7i2.252

Gall, Michael J., Adam R. Heinrich, Ilene Grossman-Bailey, Philip A. Hayden, and Justine McKnight. 2020. The Place Beyond the Fence: Slavery and Cultural Invention on a Delaware Tenant Farm. Historical Archaeology 54(2):305-333.

Heinrich, Adam R. 2019. Resource Procurement and Lithic Processing at the Sorbello 1 Site (28-Sa-214) in the Oldmans Creek Drainage, Salem County, New Jersey. Bulletin of the Archaeological Society of New Jersey 74:42-64.

Heinrich, Adam R. 2018. Archaeological Identification of Woodland Period Shelters within the Inner Coastal Plain at the Gloucester City Native American Archaeological Historic District, Gloucester City, Camden County. Bulletin of the Archaeological Society of New Jersey 71-73:68-88.

Heinrich, Adam R. 2016. Lenape Horticulturalists: Moving the “Maize Debate” Forward in the Lower Delaware River Valley. Journal of Middle Atlantic Archaeology 32:9-25.

Heinrich, Adam R. and Brock Giordano. 2015. Late 19th Century Foodways in the ‘Garden State’ at the Woodruff House, Rahway, New Jersey: Insights from Small Faunal and Large Macrobotanical Samples. Historical Archaeology 49(4):12-29.

Heinrich, Adam R. 2014. The Archaeological Signature of Stews or Grease Rendering in the Historic Period: Experimental Chopping of Long Bones and Small Fragment Sizes. Advances in Archaeological Practice 2(1): 1-12.

Heinrich, Adam R. 2014. Cherubs or Putti? Gravemarkers Demonstrating Conspicuous Consumption and the Rococo Fashion in the 18th Century. International Journal of Historical Archaeology 18: 37-64. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10761-013-0246-x

Heinrich, Adam R. 2012. Some Comments on the Archaeology of Slave Diet and the Importance of Taphonomy to Historical Faunal Analyses. Journal of African Diaspora Archaeology and Heritage 1(1): 9-40.

Heinrich, Adam R. 2011. “Remember Me…” But “Be Mindfull of Death”: The Artistic, Social, and Personal Choice Expressions Observed on the Gravemarkers of Eighteenth Century Monmouth County, New Jersey. New Jersey History 126(1): 26-57.

Professional Associations

  • Society for Historical Archaeology
  • Register of Professional Archaeologists
  • Middle Atlantic Archaeology
  • Council for Northeast Historical Archaeology
  • Archaeological Society of New Jersey

Courses

Recently Taught Classes

2024 Spring

2023 Fall

  • Cultures of the World – AN 113
  • Introduction to Archaeology – AN 107
  • Native American History and Prehistory – AN 532

2023 Summer B

2023 Spring

2022 Fall

  • Introduction to Archaeology – AN 107
  • North American Indians – AN 264
  • Zooarchaeology: the Archaeology of Animals – AN 330
  • Zooarchaeology: the Archaeology of Animals – AN 530

2022 Summer B

2022 Spring

  • Anthropology Comprehensive Exam – AN CPE
  • Historic Artifact Analysis – AN 507
  • Historical Archaeology – AN 266, HS 266
  • Introduction to Archaeology – AN 107

2021 Fall

  • Cultures of the World – AN 113
  • Introduction to Archaeology – AN 107
  • Native American History and Prehistory – AN 532, HS 532

2021 Summer B

  • Anthropology Comprehensive Exam – AN CPE
  • Field Research in Archaeology – AN 315, HS 315

2021 Spring

  • Anthropology Comprehensive Exam – AN CPE
  • Historical Archaeology – AN 266, HS 266
  • Zooarchaeology: the Archaeology of Animals – AN 330
  • Zooarchaeology: the Archaeology of Animals – AN 530

Frequently Taught Classes