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Adam Hartstone-Rose Curriculum Vitae Updated December 2016 Page 1 of 30
CURRICULUM VITAE OF ADAM HARTSTONE-ROSE, PHD
ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR OF CELL BIOLOGY & ANATOMY
Office University of South Carolina School of Medicine Home 131 Wateree Avenue
6439 Garners Ferry Road, Building 1 CBA rm C-36 Columbia, SC 29205
Columbia, SC 29209
(803) 216-3816 (919) 381-7459
EDUCATION
2003-2008 Ph.D., Duke University, Graduate School, Department of Biological Anthropology
& Anatomy, Durham, NC: Evaluating the hominin scavenging niche through
analysis of the carcass-processing abilities of the carnivore guild
1999-2003 B.A., Duke University, Trinity College, Durham, NC, Magna Cum Laude with
Departmental Distinction; Majors: Biological Anthropology & Anatomy and
English; Minor: Cultural Anthropology; Certificate: Primatology. Additional
coursework: Oxford U., UK (2002), U. of Western Australia (2001), and U. of the
Witwatersrand, South Africa (2002).
PROFESSIONAL APPOINTMENTS (*Primary appointments)
2013-present* Associate Professor of Cell Biology & Anatomy, University of South Carolina
School of Medicine, Columbia, SC.
2013-present Adjunct Associate Professor of Anthropology, University of South Carolina,
Columbia, SC
2015-present Adjunct Scientist, Riverbanks Zoo & Garden, Columbia, SC
2015-present Core faculty, Biomedical Engineering Program, University of South Carolina,
Columbia, SC
2010-2013* Assistant Professor of Biology and Anthropology, Penn State U., Altoona, PA
2010-2013 Adjunct Assistant Professor of Anthropology, Penn State U., University Park, PA
2009-2012 Research Associate, Carnegie Museum of Natural History, Pittsburgh, PA
2008-2010* Assistant Professor of Biology, Penn State University Altoona, Altoona, PA
2007* Instructor, Medical Gross Anatomy, Duke U. School of Medicine, Durham, NC
2003-2008* Graduate Assistant, Department of Biological Anthropology & Anatomy, Duke
University, Durham, NC
GRANTS
2017-2021 National Science Foundation Grant: Principal Investigator, “DRL-16-47131
– Science Learning+ STEM Teens: Examining the role of youth educators as
Adam Hartstone-Rose Curriculum Vitae Updated December 2016 Page 2 of 30
learners and teachers in informal STEM learning sites”. Recommended for
Funding. Grant total: $1,283,652 (Including additional UK portion: $2,300,000.)
2016-2019 National Science Foundation Grant: Co-Principal Investigator, “IOS-15-57125 –
Macroevolutionary analyses of cranial morphology and function in mammals”.
(Sharlene Santana, PI). Grant total: $672,702.
2014-2017 National Science Foundation Grant: Principal Investigator, “BCS-14-40599 –
Collaborative Research: Muscle constraint on relative brain size”. Grant total:
$243,936.
2015-2016 Short-Term Visiting Scholar Award, For “Dietary Correlates of Enamel Thickness,
Tufts and Decussation in Mammals”, American Association of Anatomists,
$1,870
2017-2020 National Science Foundation Grant: Principal Investigator, “IRES: Comparative
Anatomy and Functional Morphology in Cuvier’s Paris”. In review. Grant total:
$249,419
2009-2012 National Science Foundation Grant: Senior Personnel, “BCS-05-51351 – Enamel as a
dietary indicator in primates” (P Constantino, PI). Grant total: $303,793.
2005-2008 National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship Award
2008 Graduate Student Mentorship Grant, Duke University, $1,000
2007 Sigma Xi Mini Grant, $500
2007 Graduate Student Mentorship Grant, Duke University, $1,000
2006 Duke Lemur Center Director’s Fund, $350
2006 Graduate Award for International Research, Duke University, $3,000
2005 Graduate Student Mentorship Grant, Duke University, $1,000
2005 Vertical Integration Grant, Duke University, $4,000
FELLOWSHIPS AND SCHOLARSHIPS
2005-2008 National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship, full graduate tuition and
$30,000 stipend per year for three years
2003-2007 James Buchanan Duke Scholarship, Duke U., $4,000 stipend per year for four years
2006 Aleane Webb Dissertation Research Fellowship, Duke University, $250
2003-2005 Duke University. Graduate School Assistantship, full graduate tuition, health
insurance and $16,000 stipend per year
1999-2003 Angier Biddle Duke Scholar, Duke University, full undergraduate tuition
2002 Rothermere Scholarship, Oxford University, full tuition, room and board for one
summer term
Adam Hartstone-Rose Curriculum Vitae Updated December 2016 Page 3 of 30
HONORS AND AWARDS
2016 Outstanding Faculty Volunteer Award, University of South Carolina. Only annual
award for USC faculty honoring service: “Honors a member of USC faculty for
his/her outstanding contribution to the community and university through
service.”
2016 Symposium Organizer: “Muscle Functional Morphology Beyond Gross Anatomy.”
International Congress of Vertebrate Morphology, Washington DC, June 29-July
1, 2016
2015 Magellan Scholars Award, Office of Undergraduate Research, U. of South Carolina,
For work with Alicia Grant, $3,000
2015 Stand Up Carolina Hero Award, The Sexual Assault and Violence Intervention &
Prevention and the Office of Student Conduct, University of South Carolina
2014 SMART Award, Office of Undergraduate Research, University of South Carolina,
For work with Ka’la Drayton, $1,000
2014 Magellan Scholars Award, Office of Undergraduate Research, U. of South Carolina,
For work with Tyler Antonelli, $2,000
2014 Magellan Scholars Award, Office of Undergraduate Research, U. of South Carolina,
For work with Katheryne Brown, $2,000
2014 Magellan Scholars Award, Office of Undergraduate Research, U. of South Carolina,
For work with Carissa Leischner, $2,000
2013 Magellan Scholars Award, Office of Undergraduate Research, U. of South Carolina,
For work with Hannah Selvey, $2,500
2013 Magellan Scholars Award, Office of Undergraduate Research, U. of South Carolina,
For work with Bryttin Boyde, $2,500
2013 Magellan Guarantee, Office of Undergraduate Research, U. of South Carolina, $500
2012 Faculty Research and Creative Activity Award, PSU Altoona Advisory Board, $4,218
2011 Undergraduate Research Award, Research Advisory Committee, PSU Altoona, $1,500
2010 Undergraduate Research Award, Research Advisory Committee, PSU Altoona, $500
2010 Faculty Research and Creative Activity Award, PSU Altoona Advisory Board, $2,000
2010 Collaborative Research Proposal Writing Award, Research Advisory Committee,
PSU Altoona, a three-contact hour buyout
2010 Undergraduate Research Award, Research Advisory Committee, PSU Altoona, $1,500
2009 Faculty Research and Creative Activity Award, PSU Altoona Advisory Board, $2,000
2008-2009 Bass Named Instructorship Award, Duke U., $18,980 salary and fellowship to design
and teach “Our First Homes: Hominin Paleoecology”, Fall 2008 (not accepted)
Adam Hartstone-Rose Curriculum Vitae Updated December 2016 Page 4 of 30
2008 Distinguished Leadership and Service Award, “Expanding the Boundaries of
Learning”, recognizing those whose “influence and achievements have made a
significant impact on education at Duke and beyond”, $1,500 honorarium
2007 Dean’s Award for Excellence in Mentoring, Duke U., for outstanding mentorship of
undergraduate scholars, $1,500 honorarium
2006 Sigma Xi National Honor Society, Associate Member Inductee
2005-2008 National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship Award
2004 Phi Beta Kappa Honor Society Inductee
2004 National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship, Honorable Mention
1999-2003 Dean’s List and Dean’s List with Distinction, Duke University, Trinity College
2003 National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship, Honorable Mention
2003 Graduated Magna Cum Laude with Departmental Distinction, Duke U., Trinity
College
Pre – 2003 First Place, NYC Science Fair: full undergraduate tuition scholarship to New York
University (not accepted); nine other awards totaling $2,450
CURRENT RESEARCH TOPICS
Masticatory muscle architecture and oral health. Vascular Biomechanics. Primate and carnivore
feeding behavior (ingested food sizes), diet (frugivory, folivory, hypercarnivory, durophagy and
food mechanical properties), soft-tissue masticatory anatomy (the scaling of muscle weights,
physiological cross-sectional areas and fiber lengths as they relate to gape and bite force
reconstruction), cranial and dental morphology (correlates of oral health, diets and predictors of
masticatory abilities) and paleontology (especially fossil hominins, other primates, and
carnivores). The relationship between forelimb muscles, their bony origins and locomotion
patterns in primates. The role of informal public science learning sites on engaging students and
the public in STEM disciplines. Masticatory muscle architecture and oral health.
PUBLICATIONS AND PRESENTATIONS
PEER-REVIEWED ARTICLES, CHAPTERS AND BOOKS (*= HR Lab student or former student)
1. Hartstone-Rose A, Brown KN*, Leischner CL*, Drayton KD*. 2016. The diverse diets of
the Mio-Pliocene carnivorans of Langebaanweg, South Africa. South African Journal of
Science. 112(7/8):1-14. (Cover article featuring my own photorealistic reconstruction of
fossil mammals – Agriotherium and Sivatherium – from Langebaanweg, South Africa ca.
5mya)
2. Kapoor V*, Antonelli T*, Parkinson JA*, Hartstone-Rose A. 2016. Oral Health Correlates
of Captivity. Research in Veterinary Science. 107:213–219
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3. Antonelli T*, Leischner CL*, Ososky JJ, Hartstone-Rose A. 2016. The effect of captivity
on the oral health of the critically endangered black-footed ferret (Mustela nigripes).
Canadian Journal of Zoology. 94:15–22
4. Valenciano A*, Baskin J, Abella J, Pérez-Ramos A, Álvarez-Sierra M, Morales J,
Hartstone-Rose A. 2016. Megalictis, the Bone-Crushing Giant Mustelid (Carnivora,
Mustelidae, Oligobuninae) from the Early Miocene of North America. PLoS ONE.
11(4):1–26
5. Kuhn B, Hartstone-Rose A, Lacruz R, Harries A, Werdelin L, Bamford M, Berger L. 2016.
The carnivore guild circa 1.98 million years: biodiversity and implications for the
palaeoenvironment at Malapa, South Africa. Palaeobiodiversity and Palaeoenvironments.
1–6.
6. Prim DA, Zhou B; Hartstone-Rose A, Uline MJ, Shazly T, Eberth JF. 2016. A mechanical
argument for the differential performance of coronary artery grafts. Journal of the
Mechanical Behavior of Biomedical Materials. 54:93–105
7. Zhou B, Alshareef M, Prim D, Collin M*, Kempne M, Hartstone-Rose A, Eberth JF,
Rachev A, Shazly T. 2016 (online). The perivascular environment along the vertebral
artery governs segment-specific structural and mechanical properties. Acta Biomaterialia.
8. Troupin A, Shirley D, Londono-Renteria B, Watson AM, McHale C, Hall A, Lee J, Adam
Hartstone-Rose A, Klimstra WB, Gomez G, Colpitts TM. Online. A role for human skin
mast cells in dengue virus infection and systemic spread. The Journal of Immunology.
9. Robichaux JP, Fuseler JW, Patel SS, Kubalak SW, Hartstone-Rose A. Ramsdell AF. 2016.
Left-Right Analysis Of Mammary Gland Development In Retinoid X Receptor-Α+/-
Mice. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B. 371(1710):1-9
10. Hartstone-Rose A, Parkinson JA*, Criste TJ*, Perry JMG. 2015. Comparing apples and
oranges – the influence of food mechanical properties on ingestive bite sizes in lemurs.
American Journal of Physical Anthropology. 157:513–518
11. Hartstone-Rose A, Dundas RG, Boyde B*, Long R*, Farrel A, Shaw CA. 2015. The Bacula
of Rancho La Brea. Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County Contributions in
Science. 42:53–63
12. Parkinson JA*, Plummer TW, Hartstone-Rose A. 2015. Characterizing Felid Tooth
Marking and Gross Bone Damage Patterns using GIS Image Analysis: An experimental
feeding study with large felids. Journal of Human Evolution. 80 (2015) 114–134
13. Burrows AM, Hartstone-Rose A, Nash LT. 2015. Exudativory among the Asian Lorises –
it’s the Toothcomb that Counts. American Journal of Physical Anthropology. 158:663–
672
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14. Liu Q, Li J, Hartstone-Rose A, Wang J, Li J-Q, Janicki JS and Fan D. 2015. Chinese Herbal
Compounds for the Prevention and Treatment of Atherosclerosis: Experimental Evidence
and Mechanisms. Evidence-Based Complementary and Alternative Medicine. 2015:1–15
15. Perry JMG, St Clair E, Hartstone-Rose A. 2015. Craniomandibular Signals of Diet in
Adapids. American Journal of Physical Anthropology. 158:646–662
16. Diogo R., Muchlinski MN, Hartstone-Rose A. 2015. Comparative Anatomy of Primates. In:
Muehlenbein, MP (ed.), Basics in Human Evolution. Academic Press/Elsevier (San
Diego, CA). 43–56. (Cover: artistic representation of three depths of CT scans of the
specimen.)
17. Valenciano A, Abella J, Sanisidro O, Hartstone-Rose A, Álvarez-Sierra M, Morales J.
2015. Complete description of the skull and mandible of the giant mustelid Eomellivora
piveteaui Ozansoy, 1965 (Mammalia, Carnivora, Mustelidae) from Batallones (MN10),
Late Miocene (Madrid, Spain). Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. 35(4):1–19 (Cover
article featuring my own photorealistic reconstruction the life appearance of Eomellivora.
Top 10 Finalist for 2016 National Science Foundation “Vizzies” Award.)
18. Perry JMG, Bastian M, St Clair E, Hartstone-Rose A. 2015. Maximum Ingested Food Size
in Captive Anthropoids. American Journal of Physical Anthropology. 158(1):92–104
19. Hartstone-Rose A, Selvey H*, Villari J*, Atwell M*, and Schmidt T. 2014. The Three-
Dimensional Morphological Effects of Captivity. PLoS ONE. 9(11): 1–15.
20. Lambert JE, Fellner V., McKenney, E. Hartstone-Rose A. 2014. Binturong (Arctictis
binturong) and kinkajou (Potos flavus) digestive strategy: implications for interpreting
frugivory in Carnivora and Primates. PLoS ONE. 9(8): 1–8
21. Diogo R, Pastor JF, Hartstone-Rose A, Muchlinski MN. 2014. Baby Gorilla: Photographic
and Descriptive Atlas of Skeleton, Muscles and Internal Organs Including CT Scans and
Comparison with Adult Gorillas, Humans and Other Primates. Taylor & Francis (Oxford,
UK). 101 pages.
22. Perry JMG, MacNeill KE*, Heckler AL*, Rakotoarisoa G, Hartstone-Rose A. 2014.
Anatomy and Adaptations of the Chewing Muscles in Daubentonia (Lemuriformes). The
Anatomical Record. 297(2):308–316
23. Hartstone-Rose A, Kuhn B, Werdelin L, Nalla S, Berger L. 2013. A new species of fox
from the Australopithecus sediba type locality, Malapa, South Africa. Transactions of the
Royal Society of South Africa. 68(1):1–9.
24. Hartstone-Rose A, Stynder D. 2013. Hypercarnivory, durophagy or generalized carnivory
in the Mio-Pliocene hyaenids of South Africa? South African Journal of Science.
109(5/6):77–86. (Cover article featuring my own photorealistic reconstruction of fossil
mammals – Chasmaporthetes, Dinofelis and Sivatherium – from Langebaanweg, South
Africa ca. 5mya)
Adam Hartstone-Rose Curriculum Vitae Updated December 2016 Page 7 of 30
25. Hartstone-Rose A, Perry JMG and Morrow CJ*. 2012. Bite force estimation and the fiber
architecture of felid masticatory muscles. The Anatomical Record. 295:1336–1351.
26. Hartstone-Rose A, Long R*, Farrel A., Shaw C. 2012. The Clavicles of Smilodon fatalis
and Panthera atrox (Mammalia: Felidae) from Rancho La Brea, Los Angeles, California.
Journal of Morphology. 273:981–991.
27. Constantino PJ, Lee JJ-W, Gerbig Y, Hartstone-Rose A, Talebi M, Lawn BR, Lucas PW.
2012. The role of tooth enamel mechanical properties in primate dietary adaptation.
American Journal of Physical Anthropology. 148:171–177.
28. Churchill SE, Berger LR, Hartstone-Rose A, Zondo BH. 2012. Body size in African
Middle Pleistocene Homo. In S.C. Reynolds and A. Gallagher, eds., African Genesis:
Perspectives in Hominin Evolution. Cambridge University Press. Cambridge, UK. 319–
346.
29. Hartstone-Rose A. 2011. Reconstructing the diets of extinct South African carnivorans from
premolar “intercuspid notch” morphology. Journal of Zoology. 285:119–127.
30. Hartstone-Rose A, Perry JMG. 2011. Intraspecific variation in maximum Ingested food size
and body mass in Varecia rubra and Propithecus coquereli. Anatomical Research
International. 2011:1–8.
31. Bovard BN*, Hartstone-Rose A, Rowland NJ, Mulvey KL*. 2011. Sportsmen’s Perceptions
of Coyotes and Coyote Origins in Pennsylvania. Journal of the Pennsylvania Academy of
Science. 85(4):159–164
32. Perry JMG, Hartstone-Rose A, Wall CE. 2011. The jaw adductors of strepsirrhines in
relation to body size, diet, and ingested food size. The Anatomical Record. 294:712–728.
33. Constantino PJ, Lee JJ-W, Morris D, Lucas PW, Hartstone-Rose A, Lee W-K, Dominy N,
Cunningham A, Wagner M, Lawn BR. 2011. Adaptation to hard-object feeding in sea
otters and hominins. Journal of Human Evolution. 61:89–96.
34. Perry JMG, Hartstone-Rose A, Logan LL. 2011. The jaw adductor resultant and estimated
bite force in primates. Anatomical Research International. 2011:1–11.
35. Kuhn B, Werdelin L, Hartstone-Rose A, Lacruz R, Berger L. 2011. Carnivoran remains
from the Malapa hominin site, South Africa. PLoS ONE. 6(11):1–11.
36. Hartstone-Rose A, Werdelin L, De Ruiter D, Berger L, and Churchill S. 2010. The Plio-
Pleistocene ancestor of wild dogs: Lycaon sekowei sp. nov. Journal of Paleontology.
84:299–308.
37. Perry JMG, Hartstone-Rose A. 2010. Maximum ingested food size in captive strepsirrhine
primates: scaling and the effects of diet. American Journal of Physical Anthropology.
142:625–635.
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38. Lucas PW, Constantino PJ, Lee JJ-W, Hartstone-Rose A, Chai H, Lee W-K, Dominy N.
2009. Primate Dental Enamel: What it Says About Diet; in Koppe T, Meyer G, Alt, KW
(eds.): Comparative Dental Morphology. Frontiers of Oral Biology. Basel, Karger. 13:44–
48.
39. Hartstone-Rose A, Wahl S*. 2008. Using radii-of-curvature for the reconstruction of extinct
South African carnivoran masticatory behavior. Comptes Rendus Palevol. 7:629–643.
40. Hartstone-Rose A, De Ruiter D, Berger L, and Churchill S. 2007. A saber-tooth from
Coopers Cave (Gauteng, South Africa) and its implications for Megantereon (Felidae,
Machairodontinae) taxonomy. Palaeontologica Africana. 44:99–108.
RESEARCH MANUSCRIPTS SUBMITTED FOR PEER REVIEW (*=HR Lab student or former student)
1. Antonelli T*, Leischner CL*, Hartstone-Rose A. In review. The cranial morphology of the
black-footed ferret: A comparison of wild and captive specimens
2. Londono-Renteria B, Troupin A, Cardenas JC, Hall A, Perez OG, Cardenas L, Hartstone-
Rose A, Halstead S, Colpitts TM. In review. Dengue immune sera enhance Zika virus
infection in human macrophages.
OTHER PUBLICATIONS
1. Hartstone-Rose A. 2016. Journal cover. Photorealistic environmental reconstruction of
Langebaanweg, South Africa, ~5mya including Agriotherium and Sivatherium. Published
on the front cover of the South African Journal of Science. 112(7/8).
2. Hartstone-Rose A. 2016. Feeding Dragons. Riverbanks – The Membership Magazine of the
Riverbanks Zoo and Garden. May-June 2016.
3. Hartstone-Rose A. 2016. Research on the Rise. Riverbanks – The Membership Magazine of
the Riverbanks Zoo and Garden. January-March 2016.
4. Hartstone-Rose A. 2015. Journal cover. Photorealistic reconstruction of Eomellivora
piveteaui skull and life appearance. Published on the cover of the Journal of Vertebrate
Paleontology. 35(4) July 2015. Top 10 Finalist for 2016 National Science Foundation
“Vizzies” Award.
5. Hartstone-Rose A. 2013. Journal cover. Photorealistic environmental reconstruction of
Langebaanweg, South Africa, ~5mya including Chasmaporthetes, Dinofelis and
Sivatherium. Published on the front and back cover of the South African Journal of
Science. 109(5/6).
6. Hartstone-Rose A. 2001. “Our Australian cousins”. Vertices: Duke University Journal of
Science and Technology.
Adam Hartstone-Rose Curriculum Vitae Updated December 2016 Page 9 of 30
7. Hartstone-Rose A. 2000. “Extantion: transcending the extinction barrier”. Vertices: Duke
University Journal of Science and Technology.
GUEST EDITORS AND SPECIAL SECTIONS
1. Hartstone-Rose A. Invited for 2017. Guest Editor of the Special Issue “Muscle Functional
Morphology Beyond Gross Anatomy”. The Anatomical Record.
PUBLISHED ABSTRACTS AND PAPERS PRESENTED (*=HR Lab student or former student)
1. Hartstone-Rose A, Marchi D. Stretch, Strength and Speed: functional interpretations of
muscle fiber architecture in limbs and the masticatory apparatus. Anatomical Record in
press. Presented at the International Congress of Vertebrate Morphology. Washington DC.
June/July 2016
2. Leischner CL*, Allen KL, Pastor F, Marchi D, Hartstone-Rose A. Functional adaptations of
primate forearm muscle fiber architecture. Anatomical Record in press. Presented at the
International Congress of Vertebrate Morphology. Washington DC. June/July 2016.
3. Marchi D, Leischner CL*, Pastor F, Hartstone-Rose A. Leg muscle architecture in primates
and its correlation with locomotion patterns. Anatomical Record in press. Presented at the
International Congress of Vertebrate Morphology. Washington DC. June/July 2016.
4. Valenciano A*, Leischner CL*, Grant A*, Abella J, Hartstone-Rose A. Preliminary Bite
Force Estimations of Miocene Giant Mustelids (Carnivora, Mustelidae). Anatomical
Record in press. Presented at the International Congress of Vertebrate Morphology.
Washington DC. June/July 2016.
5. Perry JMG, St Clair EM, Hartstone-Rose A. Biomechanics of the chewing musculature:
osteological correlates of function and inferences from fossils. Anatomical Record in
press. Presented at the International Congress of Vertebrate Morphology. Washington DC.
June/July 2016.
6. Hartstone-Rose A, Brown KN*, Drayton KD*, Leischner CL*, Antonelli T*. The diverse
diets of the Mio-Pliocene carnivorans of Langebaanweg, South Africa. Presented at the
Annual Meeting of the Society of Vertebrate Morphology. Dallas, TX. October 15, 2015
7. Prim D, Zhou B, Hartstone-Rose A, Shazly T, Eberth J. Mechanical Analysis of Coronary
Artery Bypass Vessels. Presented at the 16th Annual Conference of the North Carolina
Tissue Engineering and Regenerative Medicine Society, Duke University. October 13,
2014
8. Hartstone-Rose A. Learning Not Science, But To Be A Scientist. Presented at Oktoberbest
2014 pedagogy conference sponsored by the Center for Teaching Excellence, University
of South Carolina. October 10, 2014
Adam Hartstone-Rose Curriculum Vitae Updated December 2016 Page 10 of 30
9. Hartstone-Rose A, Selvey H*, Atwell M*, Villari J*, Schmidt T. The Detrimental Effects of
the “Complete” Carnivore Die. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the Association of
Zoos and Aquariums. Disney’s Animal Kingdom, Orlando FL. September 17, 2014
10. Hartstone-Rose A, Selvey H*, Boyde B*, Villari J*, Schmidt T. The cranial morphology of
large captive versus wild felids. Presented at the Felid Taxon Advisory Group 2014
Meeting of the Association of Zoos and Aquariums. Smithsonian Conservation Biology
Institute, Front Royal VA. June 12, 2014
11. Hartstone-Rose A, Selvey H*, Boyde B*, Villari J*, Schmidt T. 2014. The cranial
morphology of large captive versus wild felids. The Journal of the Federation of
American Societies for Experimental Biology. 28(1). Presented at the Annual Meeting of
the American Association of Anatomists. San Diego CA. April 28, 2014
12. Hartstone-Rose A, Allen KL, MacNeill KE*, Marchi D. Correlation of forearm muscle
architecture and locomotion patterns in primates. Anatomical Record (296):C132.
Presented at the International Congress of Vertebrate Morphology. Barcelona, Spain. July
12, 2013
13. Hartstone-Rose A, Donadeo B*, Boyde B*, Long R*, Farrel A, 2013. Broken and healed
bacula of La Brea: a whole new definition of tough times! Journal of Vertebrate
Paleontology. 33 (Suppl. 3): 139A. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the Society of
Vertebrate Paleontology. Los Angeles CA. October 30, 2013.
14. Perry JMG, MacNeill KE*, Heckler AL*, Hartstone-Rose A, 2013. Reconstructions of the
chewing muscles in European adapids and subfossil lemurs. Journal of Vertebrate
Paleontology. 33 (Suppl. 3): 190A. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the Society of
Vertebrate Paleontology. Los Angeles CA. October 30, 2013.
15. Hartstone-Rose A, Allen KL, MacNeill KE*, Reilly KM*, Marchi D, 2013. Scaling of
forearm muscle architecture in primates. American Journal of Physical Anthropology.
Suppl. 56: 144-144. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Association of
Physical Anthropology. Knoxville TN. April 12, 2013.
16. Perry JMG, Hartstone-Rose A, MacNeill KE*, Heckler AL*, 2013. Aye-aye jaw adductors:
Anatomy, architecture, and allometry. American Journal of Physical Anthropology. Suppl.
56: 220-220. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Association of Physical
Anthropology. Knoxville TN. April 11, 2013.
17. Hartstone-Rose A, Criste TJ*, MacNeill KE*, Yasika NA*, Passmore LJ, Perry JMG, 2012.
The mechanical properties of maximum ingested bite size. American Journal of Physical
Anthropology. Suppl. 54: 161-161. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the American
Association of Physical Anthropology. Portland OR. April 12, 2012.
18. Criste TJ*, Hartstone-Rose A, Simpler EM*, Heckler AL*, Perry JMG, 2012. The stability
of “Maximum Ingested Bite Size” over time. American Journal of Physical Anthropology.
Adam Hartstone-Rose Curriculum Vitae Updated December 2016 Page 11 of 30
Suppl. 54: 122-122. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Association of
Physical Anthropology. Portland OR. April 12, 2012.
19. Perry JMG, Hartstone-Rose A, Bastian ML, 2012. Anthropoids take smaller bites than
strepsirrhines. American Journal of Physical Anthropology. Suppl. 54: 235-236. Presented
at the Annual Meeting of the American Association of Physical Anthropology. Portland
OR. April 13, 2012.
20. Simpler EM*, Perry JMG, Hartstone-Rose A. 2012. Dietary Correlates of Carnivoran
Masticatory Muscle Architecture. Journal of the Pennsylvania Academy of Science.
85(5):261. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the Pennsylvania Academy of Science.
Pittsburgh PA. March 10, 2012.
21. Hartstone-Rose A, Simpler EM*, Heckler AL*, 2011. The diet of the Mio-Pliocene
carnivores of Langebaanweg, South Africa. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. 31
(Suppl. 3): 122A. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the Society of Vertebrate
Paleontology. Las Vegas NV. November 3, 2011.
22. Simpler EM*, MacNeill KE*, Perry JMG, Hartstone-Rose A. 2011. Determining diet from
the crossectional shape and intercuspid notches of the teeth of the carnivores of Rancho La
Brea. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. 31 (Suppl. 3): 195A. Presented at the Annual
Meeting of the Society of Vertebrate Paleontology. Las Vegas NV. November 4, 2011.
23. Lambert JE, Hartstone-Rose A, Fellner V, McKenney E, Bovard BN*. 2011. How to be a
frugivore: fruit, carbohydrates, and digestive physiology among Primates and Carnivora.
American Journal of Primatology. 73: 70-70. Presented at the 34th Annual Meeting of the
American-Society-of-Primatologists. Austin TX. September 18, 2011.
24. Allen KL*, Marchi D, Hartstone-Rose A. 2011. Scaling of forearm muscle weights in
primates. American Journal of Physical Anthropology. Suppl. 52: 74-74. Presented at the
Annual Meeting of the American Association of Physical Anthropology. Minneapolis
MN. April 13, 2011.
25. Constantino PJ, Lee JW, Lucas PW, Hartstone-Rose A, Dominy NJ, Cunningham A*,
Lawn BR.. 2011. Paranthropus was not a sea otter: convergent adaptation to hard object
feeding. American Journal of Physical Anthropology. Suppl. 52: 112-112. Presented at the
Annual Meeting of the American Association of Physical Anthropology. Minneapolis
MN. April 13, 2011.
26. Perry JMG, Hartstone-Rose A. 2011. Division of labor in the jaw adductor muscles of
strepsirrhines. American Journal of Physical Anthropology. Suppl. 52: 237-238. Presented
at the Annual Meeting of the American Association of Physical Anthropology.
Minneapolis MN. April 12, 2011.
27. Hartstone-Rose A, Bovard BN*, Hartstone-Rose L*. 2010. A reevaluation of the fossil
jackals of the Sterkfontein Valley. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. 30 (Suppl. 3):
102A. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the Society of Vertebrate Paleontology.
Pittsburgh PA. October 11, 2010.
Adam Hartstone-Rose Curriculum Vitae Updated December 2016 Page 12 of 30
28. Lambert JE, Hartstone-Rose A, Fellner V, Bovard B*, and McKenney E. 2010. Frugivory
and digestive physiology in arboreal, tropical Carnivora (Arctictis binturong, Potos
flavus). Proceedings of the 5th International Symposium on Frugivores and Seed
Dispersal, Le Corum/Montpellier, France CEFE-CNRS, p 35. Presented at the 5th
International Symposium on Frugivores and Seed Dispersal. Montpellier, France. June 6,
2010.
29. Spigelmyer L*, Bovard BN*, Hartstone-Rose A. 2010. Associated craniodental and
postcranial hyena fossils from the type locality of Pachycrocuta bellax, Kromdraai,
Sterkfontein Valley, South Africa. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. 30 (Suppl. 3):
170A. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the Society of Vertebrate Paleontology.
Pittsburgh PA. October 11, 2010.
30. Kuhn B, Werdelin L, Hartstone-Rose A, Lacruz R, Berger L. 2010. Carnivora associated
with Australopithecus sediba, Malapa, Gauteng, South Africa. Journal of Vertebrate
Paleontology. 30 (Suppl. 3):119A. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the Society of
Vertebrate Paleontology. Pittsburgh PA. October 11, 2010.
31. Lambert JE, Hartstone-Rose A, Fellner V. 2010. Digestive physiology and use of
carbohydrates by arboreal, frugivorous Carnivora (Arctictis binturong, Potos flavus): A
test of convergent evolution with the primate pattern. American Journal of Physical
Anthropology. Suppl. 50: 150-151. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the American
Association of Physical Anthropology. Albuquerque NM. April 11, 2010
32. Constantino PJ, Lee JW, Morris D, Hartstone-Rose A, Smith T, Lucas PW, Lawn BR.
2010. Extracting ecological information from the mechanical properties and structure of
primate teeth. American Journal of Physical Anthropology. Suppl. 50: 84-84. Presented at
the Annual Meeting of the American Association of Physical Anthropology. Albuquerque
NM. April 11, 2010
33. Perry JMG, Hartstone-Rose A. 2009. The location of the jaw adductor resultant vector in
strepsirrhines. American Journal of Physical Anthropology. Suppl. 48: 209-209. Presented
at the Annual Meeting of the American Association of Physical Anthropology. Chicago
IL. April 3, 2009
34. Hartstone-Rose A, Perry JMG. 2008. The scaling of behaviorally significant gape: gape,
fiber length, and skull dimensions in strepsirrhines. American Journal of Physical
Anthropology. Suppl. 46: 113-113. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the American
Association of Physical Anthropology. Columbus OH. April 10, 2008
35. Perry JMG, Hartstone-Rose A. 2008. Chewing muscle size and diet in Eocene adapines.
American Journal of Physical Anthropology. Suppl. 46: 170-171. Presented at the Annual
Meeting of the American Association of Physical Anthropology. Columbus OH. April 10,
2008
36. Hartstone-Rose A, Perry JMG. 2007. Masticatory anatomy of felids: stretch, strength and
osteological correlates of muscle architecture. Journal of Morphology. 268 (12): 1081-
Adam Hartstone-Rose Curriculum Vitae Updated December 2016 Page 13 of 30
1081. Presented at the International Congress of Vertebrate Morphology. Paris, France.
July 19, 2007
37. Perry JMG, Hartstone-Rose A. 2007. Masticatory anatomy of strepsirrhines: selection for
stretch or strength? Journal of Morphology. 268 (12): 1116-1117. Presented at the
International Congress of Vertebrate Morphology. Paris, France. July 19, 2007
38. Hartstone-Rose A, Perry JMG. 2007. Comparative anatomy of the felid masticatory system.
The Journal of the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology. 21 (5):
A85-A85. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Association of Anatomists.
Washington DC. April 25, 2007
39. Hartstone-Rose A, Perry JMG. 2007. Intraspecific scaling of preferred bite size in
strepsirrhines and a narrow allometric comparison of preferred bite size in a frugivore and
a folivore. American Journal of Physical Anthropology. Suppl. 44: 126. Presented at the
Annual Meeting of the American Association of Physical Anthropology. Philadelphia PA.
March 29, 2007
40. Cartmill M., Schmitt D, Hartstone-Rose A. 2007. Explaining primate gaits: a carnivoran
test case. American Journal of Physical Anthropology. Suppl. 44: 84. Presented at the
Annual Meeting of the American Association of Physical Anthropology. Philadelphia PA.
March 30, 2007
41. Perry JMG, Hartstone-Rose A. 2007. Chewing muscle architecture and bite size in lemurs.
The Journal of the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology. 21
(5):A85-A85. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Association of
Anatomists. Washington DC. April 25, 2007
42. Perry JMG, Hartstone-Rose A. 2007. Do lemurs bite off more than they can chew?
American Journal of Physical Anthropology. Suppl. 44: 187. Presented at the Annual
Meeting of the American Association of Physical Anthropology. Philadelphia PA. March
30, 2007
43. Hartstone-Rose A. 2005. “Reconstructing Sabertooth Cranial Soft Tissue Anatomy Based
on Extant Felid Dissection”, Northeast Regional Meeting of the Division of Vertebrate
Morphology of the Society for Integrative and Comparative Biology (SICB), Harvard
University, Cambridge, MA, 9/17/2005.
INVITED LECTURES
“How Diet Changes the Morphology of Captive Carnivores”, Carolina Tiger Rescue, Pittsboro,
NC, November 5, 2016
“Skeletons in my closet ... and everywhere else too!”, Elliott T. Bowers Honors College, Sam
Houston State University, Huntsville, TX, February 16, 2016
Adam Hartstone-Rose Curriculum Vitae Updated December 2016 Page 14 of 30
“The Descent of Man: What it Means to be Human”, Human Evolution Course, Saint Michael's
College, Colchester, VT, January 29, 2016
“Winnie the Pooh and Other Stories About Masticatory Anatomy!” Department of Biology, Saint
Michael's College, Colchester, VT, January 27, 2016
“How to successfully apply for the National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship”,
Department of Anthropology, University of South Carolina, Columbia, SC, August 19,
2015
“Interpreting Skulls and Teeth: What They Can Tell Us About How Animals Interact With the
World”, Golden K Kiwanis, Kiwanis International, Columbia, SC, March 18, 2015
“Osteological Correlates of Masticatory Muscle Architecture and Dietary Reconstruction”,
Osteology in the Carolinas working group, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC,
February 8, 2014
“Darwin’s Predictions About the Human Fossil Record”, Saint Leo University, Shaw Air Force
Base, Sumter, SC, February 19, 2014.
“Adaptations in Mastication: the anatomy of how animals eat what they eat”, Department of
Biological Sciences Seminar Series, Sam Houston State University, Huntsville, TX,
February 6, 2014.
“The Descent of Man”, Saint Leo University, Shaw Air Force Base, Sumter, SC, September 24,
2013.
“Lions and Tigers and Lemurs: A Comparative Approach to Biological Anthropology”,
Anthropology Departmental Colloquium, University of South Carolina, Columbia, SC,
April 25, 2013.
“Chew on this! Explorations in Mastication”, Math & Natural Sciences Faculty Colloquium,
Penn State University Altoona, PA, October 19, 2011.
“Carnivore Masticatory Adaptations: Influences of Food Properties and Prey Size”, School of
Osteopathic Medicine, Midwestern University, Downers Grove, IL, March 18, 2011.
“The Hunters and the Hunted: Carnivores and Human Evolution”, Department of Anthropology,
Penn State University, University Park, PA, October 9, 2009.
“Destructive Sampling Without Destroying the Sample: Analysis of Soft Tissue Anatomy and Its
Paleontological Applications”, Department of Biological Sciences Seminar Series, Sam
Houston State University, Huntsville, TX, February 26, 2009.
“Undergraduate Collaborators: Incorporation of Undergraduate Colleagues into Explorations of
Carnivore Morphology and Ecology”, Math & Natural Sciences Faculty Colloquium,
Penn State University Altoona, PA, February 12, 2009.
Adam Hartstone-Rose Curriculum Vitae Updated December 2016 Page 15 of 30
“Human Evolution in the Context of Darwin”, Darwin Day Celebration, Penn State University
Altoona, PA, February 12, 2009.
“Using Radii of Curvature for the Reconstruction of Extinct South African Carnivoran
Masticatory Behavior”, Revealing Hominid Origins Carnivore Working Group, Poitiers
France, May 9-18, 2008.
“Human Bipedality: Evolution, Anatomy and Why We Still Have a Long Way to Go”, Primate
Anatomy Class, Jonathan Perry, Duke University, Durham, NC, July 18, 2007.
“Jon and Adam's Bogus Journey: Scaling of Lemur and Cat Masticatory Muscles; A Tag Team
Battle!” EvMorph Lecture Series, Duke University, Durham, NC, December 5, 2006.
“What it Means to be Human; a Biological Anthropology Perspective”, Talent Identification
Program, Duke University, Durham, NC, July 20, 2005.
“Sabertooths: the Most Ridiculously Excellent Example of Convergence EVER!” EvMorph
Lecture Series, Duke University, Durham, NC, April 8, 2005.
“Megantereon, Not Just One Cool Cat; a New Fossil and its Implications for Megantereon
Taxonomy”, EvMorph Lecture Series, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina, April
26, 2004.
“Large Mammals of Quaternary South Africa; Phylogeny, Taxonomy and Identification”, South
African Paleoanthropology Field Work Class, Dr. Patrick Lewis, Pfeifer University, NC,
March 2, 2004.
“Aboriginal Australian Hunting Technology”, How We Once Did Things; Primitive
Technologies Class, Drs. Steven Churchill and Steven Vogel, Duke University, Durham,
NC, February 28, 2004.
PUBLISHED FIGURES (Other than those coauthored)
1. Mulvey K.L. 2016. Evaluations of moral and conventional intergroup transgressions. British
Journal of Developmental Psychology.
2. Leng S, Iwanowycz S, Saaoud F, Wang J, Wang J, Sergin I, Razani B and Fan D. 2016.
Ursolic acid enhances macrophage autophagy and attenuates atherogenesis. J. Lipid Res.
57(6):1006-1016.
3. Romito E, Doviak H, Logdon C, Freels P, Shazly T, Spinale FG. 2016. Sonomicrometry-
based analysis of post-myocardial infarction regional mechanics. Annals of Biomedical
Engineering. 2016:1-14.
4. Watson SR, Liu P, Peña EA, Sutton MA, Eberth JF, Lessner SM. 2016. Comparison of
Aortic Collagen Fiber Angle Distribution in Mouse Models of Atherosclerosis Using
Adam Hartstone-Rose Curriculum Vitae Updated December 2016 Page 16 of 30
Second-Harmonic Generation (SHG) Microscopy. Journal of Microscopy and
Microanalysis. 22(1):55–62.
5. Mulvey KL. 2016. Children's Reasoning About Social Exclusion: Balancing Many Factors.
Child Development Perspectives. 10(1):22–27.
6. Liu Q, Li J, Liang Q, Wang D, Luo Y, Yu F, Janicki JS, Fan D. 2015. Sparstolonin B
suppresses rat vascular smooth muscle cell proliferation, migration, inflammatory
response and lipid accumulation. Vascul. Pharmacol. 67–69:59–66
7. Mulvey KL, Killen M. 2015. Challenging gender stereotypes: Resistance and exclusion.
Child Development. 86: 681–694.
8. Ziemba SE. 2006. Fundamentals of Anatomy and Physiology: A Lab Guide to Dissection.
Kendall/Hunt Publishing Co., Dubuque, Iowa. 17 anatomical figures.
MEDIA
The New York Times, Quoted Expert Commentary on “Weasels Are Built for the Hunt”, June 13,
2016.
http://www.nytimes.com/2016/06/14/science/weasels-are-built-for-the-
hunt.html?hp&action=click&pgtype=Homepage&clickSource=story-
heading&module=mini-moth®ion=top-stories-below&WT.nav=top-stories-
below&_r=0
National Geographic, NGM.com, Featured Research. “Paleo Profile: The Giant, Bone-Crushing
Weasel” – Blog about our paper “Megalictis, the bone-crushing giant mustelid (Carnivora,
Mustelidae, Oligobuninae) from the Early Miocene of North America.” In PLOS ONE.
April 15, 2016.
http://phenomena.nationalgeographic.com/2016/04/15/paleo-profile-the-giant-bone-
crushing-weasel/
Various Spanish Media surrounding the release of “Megalictis, the bone-crushing giant mustelid
(Carnivora, Mustelidae, Oligobuninae) from the Early Miocene of North America.” In
PLOS ONE. April 2016.
http://www.elmundo.es/ciencia/2016/04/08/570781e646163f7e778b45d8.html
http://www.mncn.csic.es/Portada_2016_04_06_megalictis/seccion=1224&idioma=es_ES
&id=2016040808490001&activo=12.do
http://www.dicyt.com/noticias/un-antepasado-de-la-comadreja-que-rompia-huesos-con-
los-dientes
http://www.icp.cat/index.php/es/sala-de-prensa/noticias-icp/item/2579-megalictis-ferox-
plos-one-juan-abella-alberto-valenciano-icp
http://www.efefuturo.com/noticia/antepasado-mustelidos-paleontologia-2/
http://www.abc.es/ciencia/abci-comadreja-feroz-partia-huesos-dentelladas-
201604072056_noticia.html
Adam Hartstone-Rose Curriculum Vitae Updated December 2016 Page 17 of 30
Riverbanks – The Membership Magazine of the Riverbanks Zoo and Garden, Formal Introduction
accompanying my piece “Research on the Rise” describing role as the zoo’s first Adjunct
Scientist. January-March 2016.
National Geographic, NGM.com, Featured Research. “Broken Baculum a Sign of Painful Ice
Age Injury” – Blog about our paper The Bacula of Rancho La Brea. October 2, 2015.
http://phenomena.nationalgeographic.com/2015/10/02/broken-baculum-a-sign-of-painful-
ice-age-injury/
The Guardian, Content Consultant. “Golden jackal: A new wolf species hiding in plain sight” –
Expert commentary about a new piece of research conducted by colleagues. July, 2015.
http://www.theguardian.com/science/grrlscientist/2015/jul/30/golden-jackal-a-new-wolf-
species-hiding-in-plain-sight?CMP=share_btn_tw
Various International Media surrounding primate and carnivore dissection research in Spain,
June/July 2015.
http://www.dicyt.com/noticias/un-grupo-de-investigadores-de-estados-unidos-disecciona-
primates-y-carnivoros-en-el-museo-anatomico-de-la-uva
http://comunicacion.uva.es/export/sites/comunicacion/01.lauvainforma/ff1185a9-2165-
11e5-9cec-d59857eb090a/
Various Spanish Media surrounding the release of “A complete skull and mandible of
Eomellivora piveteaui Ozansoy, 1965 (Carnivora, Mammalia) from Batallones-3 (MN10),
Upper Miocene (Madrid, Spain)” In Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. June/July 2015.
http://www.igeo.ucm-csic.es/images/igeo/noticias/25_junio_2015_mustelido.pdf
http://www.efefuturo.com/noticia/fosiles-craneales-especie-tejon/
BBC Wildlife Magazine, Featured Research. “Which cat has the strongest bite” – feature piece on
felid bite force research, November, 2014.
UofSC Today, Featured Mentor. “Into Africa” – feature story on AHR Lab student Ka’la
Drayton’s research in South Africa, August 5, 2014.
http://www.sc.edu/uofsc/stories/2014/08_kala_drayton_africa_summer_research.php#.U-
kFh_ldV8E
National Geographic, Solicited Expert Commentary on “Extinct Fox Species With Supersharp
Teeth Discovered in Tibet”, June 2014.
news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2014/06/140610-animals-foxes-tibet-new-species-
fossils-science/
USC Times, featured in an article about Science Fairs. March, 2014. 25(3):2, 8-10
South Carolina Medicine (periodical produced by the University of South Carolina School of
Medicine), featured in a photograph depicting my involvement in the School of
Medicine’s Mini-Med School program – “Record-Setting Crowd Enjoys Mini-Med
School” – p. 16. Winter 2014.
http://www.med.sc.edu/SC_Medicine_Winter_2014(FINAL).pdf
Adam Hartstone-Rose Curriculum Vitae Updated December 2016 Page 18 of 30
Palaeocast, feature photograph and interview, interview at 31:45 on the "Day Two". October 31,
2013.
http://www.palaeocast.com/the-society-of-vertebrate-paleontology-annual-
meeting/#.U6x7MvldV8E
Sciency Thoughts, feature article “The diet of the Langebaanweg Hyaenids”. August 12, 2013.
http://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2013/08/the-diet-of-langebaanweg-hyaenids.html
Sci-News.com, feature article “New Fossil Fox Discovered in South Africa, Co-Existed with
Australopithecus”. January 24, 2013.
http://www.sci-news.com/paleontology/article00840.html
PUBLIC SCIENCE AND SCIENTIFIC OUTREACH
2016-Present Lead Artist – West Coast Fossil Park Interpretation Center, Langebaanweg,
South Africa.
I am creating anatomically accurate photorealistic reconstructions of the animals
that were found at one of the most important fossil localities in Africa: the 5.2
million year old Langebaanweg. All of these are being installed in a new state of
the art 60,000,000 Rand interpretation center. This work includes consultation
on the design of several life-size sculptures of the giant short-necked giraffe
Sivatherium, the creation of an interpretation panel describing the process of
interpreting the fossil record to create these artistic reproductions of what the
animals would have looked like, and the creation of four large wall panels – each
of which will be printed 4 x 5 meters and depict extinct species such as ancient
elephants, the giant African bear, a huge wolverine and several species of fossil
hyenas. The goal of this work is to bring fossils “to life” for the general public
so that citizens can understand not only the value of their fossil heritage but also
what it would have viscerally felt like to encounter these magnificent ancient
animals.
2016-Present Curatorial Scientist – Burke Museum of Natural History and Culture,
University of Washington, Seattle.
As part of our NSF grant “IOS-15-57125 – Macroevolutionary analyses of
cranial morphology and function in mammals”, my colleague Sharlene Santana
and I are designing an exhibit on functional morphology for this public museum
whose history extends in the area more than a century. Our interactive exhibit
will feature pieces aimed at children and adults with a focus on adaptations
found in bats, carnivores and primates.
2015-Present Adjunct Scientist, Riverbanks Zoo and Garden.
I am the first “Adjunct Scientist” that this leading zoo has ever had – a research
position that was created to recognize my contribution to the organization and my
unique skills that the organization benefits from. Because of this work, I was
given the Outstanding Faculty Volunteer Award by the University of South
Carolina – the highest service award given by the university to a faculty member.
In this role, I serve as the zoo’s main scientific consultant; I review all of the
Adam Hartstone-Rose Curriculum Vitae Updated December 2016 Page 19 of 30
applications that they receive for their “Conservation Support Fund” a granting
mechanism by which Riverbanks pays more than $80,000 for conservation
projects throughout the region, country and world. I also review all research
proposals submitted to the zoo. Additionally, I conduct research at the zoo with
my students and contribute to their public outreach through the publication of
articles written for the public and published in their magazine – including two
recent articles: Feeding Dragons and Research on the Rise. The latter was a
feature about the role of research in modern zoos with a description of my work
written by the zoo’s curator of animals.
2016 Invited Speaker, Carolina Tiger Rescue, Pittsboro NC.
I have been invited to give a talk to members and friends of this wonderful non-
breeding rescue for which I previously served as a Board Member and Vice
President (see below). My talk is about my research in the detrimental
morphological effects of captivity and how feeding animals whole carcass diets –
something that most zoos do not do, but that CTR does – is actually much
healthier for the animals from an anatomical perspective.
2015 Invited Speaker, Golden K Kiwanis, Kiwanis International, Columbia, SC.
I was invited to give a talk to the local branch of Kiwanis titled “Interpreting
Skulls and Teeth: what they can tell us about how animals interact with the
world”. This community of mostly senior and retired citizens invited me to
discuss functional morphology of some of my specimens and I led them in a
participatory exercise that involved small groups discussing individual
specimens with the aim of identification and consideration of functional niche.
2014 Content Consultant, The New York Times, and National Geographic, USA; The
Guardian and the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC), UK.
I have been contacted by numerous publishers and production companies (most
often by National Geographic and various British companies) to consult with
them about their description of the latest scientific research in ways that are
easily intelligible to the public. In some cases these interviews are simply
consultative, in others they result in quotes (e.g., The New York Times) and still
others they result in whole features (e.g., BBC Wildlife Magazine). It is essential
to present scientific research to the general public, and this is a rewarding way to
help do that.
2013, 2014 Osteology Presenter, STEM Fair, Children’s Center at USC, University of South
Carolina.
I taught children from throughout the community about the diversity and function
of skulls, teeth and bones through an interactive display of more than a dozen
osteological specimens from alligators and lions to beavers and warthogs.
Special emphasis was placed on identifying the species (for the younger children)
to studying the functional anatomy of the teeth including hypothesizing about
how teeth interact with foods (for the older children).
Adam Hartstone-Rose Curriculum Vitae Updated December 2016 Page 20 of 30
2013 Osteology Presenter, University of South Carolina School of Medicine “Mini-Med
School.”
I brought several dozen osteological specimens to our anatomy museum and
demonstrated their diversity to an audience from the local community primarily
comprised of retirees and young students considering education at medical
school. Special emphasis was placed on phylogenetics (how animals are related)
and functional morphology (how skulls are adapted toward particular abilities).
2009-2011 Vice President/Board Member, Carolina Tiger Rescue, Pittsboro NC.
As a researcher, I have worked with many scientific organizations that have
public outreach as one of their missions. Not only have I conducted research at
Carolina Tiger Rescue – a non-breeding facility dedicated to the human housing
of wild cats with ~70 lions, tigers, leopards and small wild cat species – but
because of my long-term involvement in the facility I was asked to join the board
of directors and, for one term, serve as the center’s Vice President. During my
tenure on the board, I helped codify the values to include the education of the
public about the plight of wildcats in captivity and in the wild and the advocacy
for action to maintain wildcats in sustainable native habitats, or when that is not
a viable option, for the respectful, humane treatment of them in captivity.
2003-2008 Educational Specialist and Scientific Technician, Carnivore Preservation Trust
(Now: Carolina Tiger Rescue), Pittsboro NC.
Prior to joining the board of directors, I helped the center’s mission by leading
specialized tours (especially to VIPs interested in learning more about the
science done at the center as well as biology and conservation of the animals) as
well as helped preserve and maintain the education collection of skulls and
skeletons.
1999-2008 Educational Specialist and Scientific Technician, Duke Lemur Center (Formerly:
Duke University Primate Center), Durham NC.
Similar to my work at Carolina Tiger Rescue, I led tours of this unique research
facility with several hundred captive lemurs. I was generally called upon to lead
more scientific tours, especially to VIPs about research and how the center
relates to the wild animals in Madagascar – the only place on earth with wild
lemurs, and a country in which I have done research during six visits. For the
Lemur Center, I also prepared skeletal material both of modern lemurs as well as
their extinct relatives.
2002-2008 Scientific Technician, Department of Biological Anthropology & Anatomy (Now:
Department of Evolutionary Anthropology), Duke University, Durham NC.
I made molds and casts of hominin skulls to be used as teaching materials and
maintained the osteology teaching collect.
2006-2008 Director of Excursions and Scientific Mentor, Building Opportunities and
Overtures in Science and Technology (BOOST) Program, Duke University,
Durham NC.
Adam Hartstone-Rose Curriculum Vitae Updated December 2016 Page 21 of 30
In 2006 I was hired as a mentor in this program funded by the Howard Hughes
Foundation to couple science graduate students with minority and female middle
school students in an effort to maintain their abilities and interest in STEM
disciplines. After my first year as a mentor, I was promoted to the Director of
Excursions for the program and organized trips to local STEM facilities
including many of the museums and animal centers with which I was already
deeply affiliated. In the years since this program, the students that I mentored
have gone on to University and are excelling in their programs.
2001 & 2003 Summer Science Program Educator, Museum of Life and Science, Durham NC.
For two summers, I was hired to teach science and technology oriented courses
to young children in week-long camps. I was offered a position as the Assistant
Director of Education for the museum, but the Lemur Center asked me to
continue my work for them.
1995-1999 Assistant Scientific Technician, American Museum of Natural History, New
York, Anthropology and Mammalogy Departments.
Prior to moving to NC, I worked for curators in two different departments at the
AMNH. I conducted collection management tasks and also prepared
osteological materials and scientific casts. Some of the pieces that I prepared are
still on display in what is widely regarded as one of the greatest natural history
museums in the world.
TEACHING EXPERIENCE
POST-DOCTORAL SCHOLARS MENTORED AT UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH CAROLINA
2014-2015 Dr. Jenifer Parkinson
GRADUATE STUDENTS MENTORED
Expected 2020 Michael Crouch, Dissertation Research Mentor, PhD in Biomedical Sciences,
University of South Carolina School of Medicine
Expected 2018 Huda Atiya, Dissertation Committee Chair, PhD in Biomedical Sciences,
University of South Carolina School of Medicine
Expected 2017 Joseph Costa, Thesis Committee Member, PhD in Pathology and Anatomical
Sciences, University at Buffalo
Expected 2017 Justin Levy, Thesis Committee Member, Masters of Biology, Sam Houston State
University
Expected 2017 Joseph Villari, Thesis Committee Member, Masters of Environmental Science
and Policy, George Mason University
2016 Tyler Antonelli, Thesis Advisor, Masters of Biomedical Sciences, University of
South Carolina School of Medicine, Effects of Diet on the Oral Health and
Cranial Morphology of the Black-Footed Ferret
2015 Morgan Flahive, Thesis Advisor, Masters of Biomedical Sciences, University of
South Carolina School of Medicine, Evaluating Muscle Fiber Architecture
Adam Hartstone-Rose Curriculum Vitae Updated December 2016 Page 22 of 30
2014 Varsha Kapoor, Thesis Advisor, Masters of Biomedical Sciences, University of
South Carolina School of Medicine, Mechanical Properties of Diet and Its
Effect on Oral Health
MEDICAL STUDENTS MENTORED (IN RESEARCH PROJECTS) AT UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH
CAROLINA
2016-Present Brady Nichols
2016-Present Brody Hingst
UNDERGRADUATE STUDENTS MENTORED AT UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH CAROLINA
(*=Honors Thesis or Senior Design Project Supervisor)
2013-Present Carissa Leischner*
2015-Present Katherine Lighthart
2015-Present Colin Basham*
2015-Present Aaron Bishop
2015-Present Candace Smart
2016-Present Ashley Deutsch*
2016-Present Anne Kershner
2016-Present Marissa Boettcher*
2016-Present Christopher Wach
2016-Present Cleome Hubbell
2016-Present Leon Tran
2016-Present Sean Demchak
2014-Present Mary McCaughey
2016 Michael Collins
2014-2016 Andrea Mikes
2015-2016 Alicia Grant*
2015-2016 Cyrus Vakili Rad*
2014-2015 Tyler Antonelli* (continued as Masters student)
2014-2015 Katheryne Brown
2014-2015 Ka’la Drayton
2014-2015 India McQueen
2014 Madeline Atwell
2014 Sydney Chason
2013-2014 Hannah Selvey*
2013 Bryttin Boyde
2013 Anna Ridenour
Adam Hartstone-Rose Curriculum Vitae Updated December 2016 Page 23 of 30
COURSES TAUGHT AT UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH CAROLINA
Spring 2016 Human Anatomy and Physiology for Biomedical Engineers, BMEN 345,
Undergraduate Level (lectures and labs), USC College of Engineering and
Computing
Spring 2016 Human Anatomy and Physiology for Biomedical Engineers, BMEN 723,
Graduate Level (lectures), USC College of Engineering and Computing
Fall 2015 Medical Embryology and Gross Anatomy, MCBA 601, Medical Student Level
(lectures and labs), USC School of Medicine
Spring 2015 Human Anatomy and Physiology for Biomedical Engineers, BMEN 345,
Undergraduate Level (lectures and labs), USC College of Engineering and
Computing
Fall 2014 Medical Embryology and Gross Anatomy, MCBA 601, Medical Student Level
(lectures and labs), USC School of Medicine
Spring 2014 Human Origins: An Introduction to Biological Anthropology, ANTH 161,
Undergraduate Level (guest lectures), USC College of Arts and Sciences
Spring 2014 Vascular Mechanics and Hemodynamics, BMEN 598E, Graduate Level (guest
lecture), USC College of Engineering and Computing
Fall 2013 Medical Embryology and Gross Anatomy, MCBA 601, Medical Student Level
(lectures and labs), USC School of Medicine
Spring 2013 Special Topics in Human Anatomy, MCBA 710, Graduate Level 3 (guest
lectures and labs), USC School of Medicine
Spring 2013 Special Topics in Human Anatomy Emphasis on Musculoskeletal Anatomy,
MCBA 710/MCBA 715, Graduate Level (guest lectures and labs),
USC School of Medicine
COURSES DIRECTED AND TAUGHT AT PENN STATE UNIVERSITY ALTOONA
Fall 2012 Mammalian Anatomy, Biology 129 (lectures and labs)
Spring 2012 Human Body: Form and Function, Bi Sci 4 (lectures)
Spring 2012 Mammalian Anatomy, Biology 129 (lectures and labs)
Spring 2011 Comparative Vertebrate Anatomy, Biology 421 (seminar and labs)
Spring 2011 Mammalian Anatomy, Biology 129 (lectures)
Fall 2010 Mammalian Anatomy, Biology 129 (lectures and labs)
Summer 2010 Mammalian Anatomy, Biology 129 (lectures and labs)
Spring 2010 Evolution, Biology 427 (seminar)
Spring 2010 Mammalian Anatomy, Biology 129 (lectures)
Fall 2009 Mammalian Anatomy, Biology 129 (lectures and labs)
Summer 2009 Mammalian Anatomy, Biology 129 (lectures and labs)
Spring 2009 Comparative Vertebrate Anatomy, Biology 421 (seminar and labs)
Spring 2009 Mammalian Anatomy, Biology 129 (lectures)
Fall 2008 Mammalian Anatomy, Biology 129 (lectures and labs)
Adam Hartstone-Rose Curriculum Vitae Updated December 2016 Page 24 of 30
RESEARCH STUDENTS SUPERVISED AT PENN STATE
Fall 2012 Primate Forelimb Anatomy
Student coauthored abstract published, student coauthored paper in prep.
Fall 2012 Osteological Preparation Techniques
Summer 2012 Aye-aye masticatory muscle anatomy
Student coauthored abstract published, student coauthored paper published.
Summer 2012 Aye-aye forelimb muscle anatomy
Student coauthored paper in prep.
Spring 2012 Primate Forelimb Anatomy
Student coauthored abstract published, student coauthored paper in prep.
Spring 2012 Primate Masticatory Anatomy
Student coauthored paper in prep.
Spring 2012 Osteological Preparation Techniques
Spring 2012 Carnivore Masticatory Anatomy
Student coauthored paper in prep.
Fall 2011 Lemur Maximum Ingested Bite Size and Food Mechanical Properties
Student coauthored paper in prep.
Fall 2011 Dietary Specificity in the Carnivora of Rancho La Brea
Student coauthored abstract published, student coauthored paper in prep.
Fall 2011 Dietary Specificity in the Hyaenids of Langebaanweg, South Africa
Student coauthored abstract published, paper published.
Spring 2011 Carnivore Masticatory Anatomy
Student coauthored abstract published, student coauthored paper in prep.
Fall 2010 Carnivore Masticatory Anatomy
Student coauthored abstract published, student coauthored paper in prep.
Summer 2010 Hyena Comparative Craniodental Anatomy (at South Africa Museum, Transvaal
Museum, and University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa)
Student coauthored abstract published, student coauthored paper in prep.
Spring 2010 Carnivore Masticatory Anatomy
Student coauthored abstract published, student coauthored paper in prep.
Fall 2009 Primate Gastrointestinal Anatomy
Fall 2009 Carnivore Masticatory Anatomy
Student coauthored abstract published, student coauthored paper in prep.
Fall 2009 Osteological Preparation
Summer 2009 Jackal Comparative Craniodental Anatomy (at Transvaal Museum, South Africa
and the Smithsonian Museum of Natural History, Washington, DC)
Student coauthored abstract published, student coauthored paper in prep.
Spring 2009 Human Dimensions of Coyote Emigration into Central PA
Adam Hartstone-Rose Curriculum Vitae Updated December 2016 Page 25 of 30
Peer reviewed paper published with student as first author.
Fall 2008 Human Dimensions of Coyote Emigration into Central PA
Peer reviewed paper published with student as first author.
COURSES TAUGHT AT DUKE UNIVERSITY
2008 Human Evolution, Trinity College, course director
2007 Medical Gross Anatomy, School of Medicine, course instructor
2007 Human Evolution, Trinity College, course director
2007 Comparative Mammalian Anatomy, Trinity College, course director
2007 Next of Kin: The Great Apes, Trinity College, course director
2006 Human Evolution, Trinity College, course director
2006 Felid Soft Tissue Masticatory Anatomy, Trinity College, independent study
course director
2005 Introduction to Bio. Anthropology & Anatomy Discussion, Trinity College,
course director
TEACHING ASSISTANT, DUKE UNIVERSITY, Department of Biological Anthropology & Anatomy
2007 Deep History
2005 Introduction to Biological Anthropology & Anatomy
2005 Introduction to Forensic Anthropology
2004 Hunters and Gatherers
2003-2005 Paleoanthropology Field Methods, Duke in S. Afr. Field School, three semesters
2003-2005 Quaternary Prehistory of South Africa, Duke in South Africa Field School, three
semesters
STUDENT-MENTORED GRANTS, FELLOWSHIPS AND AWARDS
2016 University of South Carolina School of Medicine Research Program for Medical Students
(RPMS), to Brady Nichols, $2,500 stipend and $500 materials: $3,000
2016 Science Undergraduate Research Fellowships (SURF), University of South Carolina
Honors College, to Colin Basham, $3,000
2015 Science Undergraduate Research Fellowships (SURF), University of South Carolina
Honors College, to Alicia Grant, $3,000
2015 Science Undergraduate Research Fellowships (SURF), University of South Carolina
Honors College, to Colin Basham, $3,000
2014 Science Undergraduate Research Fellowships (SURF), University of South Carolina
Honors College, to Tyler Antonelli, $3,000
2014 SC-AMP Summer Research Program, Office of Undergraduate Research, University of
South Carolina, to Ka’la Drayton, $8,000
2014 Research Travel Support, University of South Carolina Honors College,
to Hannah Selvey, $1,000
Adam Hartstone-Rose Curriculum Vitae Updated December 2016 Page 26 of 30
2014 Research Travel Support, University of South Carolina Honors College,
to Tyler Antonelli, $1,000
2014 Magellan Mini-Grant, Office of Undergraduate Research, University of South Carolina,
to Hannah Selvey, $1,000
2014 Magellan Mini-Grant, Office of Undergraduate Research, University of South Carolina,
to Tyler Antonelli, $1,000
2014 Magellan Mini-Grant, Office of Undergraduate Research, University of South Carolina,
to Katheryne Brown, $1,000
2014 Magellan Mini-Grant, Office of Undergraduate Research, University of South Carolina,
to Carissa Leischner, $1,000
2013 Presidential Fellowship, University of South Carolina, to Brett Donadeo. $32,000
Highest university-wide award for “promise of excellence at the graduate
level”. $8,000 per year for four years. Declined.
2013 Collection Study Grant, American Museum of Natural History, New York, to Alberto
Valenciano, $1,250
2013 Exploration Scholars Research Program grant, University of South Carolina Honors
College, to Hannah Selvey, $3,000
2013 Science Undergraduate Research Fellowships (SURF), University of South Carolina
Honors College, to Bryttin Boyde, $3,000
2013 Magellan Guarantee, Office of Undergraduate Research, University of South Carolina,
to Hannah Selvey, $1,500
2013 Outstanding First-Year Research Project, Trio McNair Scholars Program, University of
South Carolina, to Hannah Selvey
2013 Third place award, Life Sciences, SAEOPP TRIO McNair conference, Atlanta GA,
to Hannah Selvey
2012 Summer Discovery Grant, Penn State University, to Kristen MacNeill, $3,000
2012 Student Summer Research Grant, PSU Altoona, to Ashley Sloan, $1,500
2012 Student-Initiated Research Grant, PSU Altoona, to Kristen MacNeill, $7,150
2012 Student Conference Travel Grant, Penn State University, to Ashley Sloan, $600
2012 Student Conference Travel Grant, Penn State University, to Kristen MacNeill, $600
2012 Student Conference Travel Grant, Penn State University, to Taylor Criste, $600
2011 Student-Initiated Research Grant, PSU Altoona, to Amanda Heckler, $1,948
2011 Student Conference Travel Grant, Penn State University, to Kristen MacNeill, $900
2011 Student Conference Travel Grant, Penn State University, to Amanda Heckler, $900
2011 Student Conference Travel Grant, Penn State University, to Beth Simpler, $900
2011 Student Summer Research Grant, PSU Altoona, to Taylor Criste, $1,500
2011 Student Summer Research Grant, PSU Altoona, to Amanda Heckler, $1,500
2011 Student Summer Research Grant, PSU Altoona, to Beth Simpler, $1,500
2010 Student Summer Research Grant, PSU Altoona, to Lauren Spigelmyer, $1,500
2010 Student Summer Research Grant, PSU Altoona, to Gina Zappia, $1,500
2010 Summer Discovery Grant, Penn State University, to Lauren Spigelmyer, $2,500
Adam Hartstone-Rose Curriculum Vitae Updated December 2016 Page 27 of 30
2010 Student-Initiated Research Grant, PSU Altoona, to Beth Simpler, $1,500
2010 Student-Initiated Research Grant, PSU Altoona, to Gina Zappia, $1,500
2009 Student International Research Grant, PSU Altoona, to Brittany Bovard, $1,500
2009 Student-Initiated Research Grant, PSU Altoona, to Brittany Bovard, $1,934
2008 Trinity College Research Forum, Duke University, to CJ Morrow, $500
2008 Trinity College Research Forum, Duke University, to Shaina Wahl, $500
2008 Undergraduate Research Support Grant, Duke University, to CJ Morrow, $350
2008 Undergraduate Research Support Grant, Duke University, to Shaina Wahl, $350
2007 Undergraduate Research Support Grant, Duke University, to CJ Morrow, $350
2007 Undergraduate Research Support Grant, Duke University, to Shaina Wahl, $350
2006 Howard Hughes Fellowship Grant, Duke University, to Neal Schilling, $500
2006 Undergraduate Research Support Grant, Duke University, to Neal Schilling, $350
2005 Vertical Integration Grant, Duke University, to Neal Schilling, $4,000
2005 Undergraduate Research Support Grant, Duke University, to Neal Schilling, $350
SERVICE TO THE UNIVERSITY
2015-present Member, Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee (IACUC), University of
South Carolina.
2014-present Ad hoc Reviewer - SPARC Graduate Research Grant, Office of the Vice President
for Research, University of South Carolina.
2013-Present Member, Carolina and McNair Scholars Selection Committee, University of South
Carolina.
2013-Present Member, Graduate Curriculum Committee, University of South Carolina School of
Medicine.
2013-Present Safe Zone Ally, University of South Carolina. (The Safe Zone Ally Program is a
visible network of allies who are committed to creating a community of respect
and dignity for LGBT individuals.)
2013-present Member of the Graduate Faculty, University of South Carolina, Columbia, SC
2014-2016 Member, USC National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowships
Committee.
2013-2016 Member, Student Services Committee, University of South Carolina School of
Medicine.
2014 Judge, Discovery Day, Office of Undergraduate Research, University of South
Carolina.
2013-2014 Judge, Department of Defense SC Junior Science & Humanities Symposium,
University of South Carolina.
2013, 2014 Instructor, STEM Fair, Children’s Center at USC, University of South Carolina.
(Taught children from throughout the community about the diversity and function
of skulls, teeth and bones.)
2013 Osteology Presenter, USC SOM Mini-Med School.
Adam Hartstone-Rose Curriculum Vitae Updated December 2016 Page 28 of 30
2011-2013 Member, Faculty Affairs Committee, Division of Math & Natural Science, Penn
State Altoona.
2011-2013 Member, Penn State Altoona Faculty Senate Research Committee.
2010-2013 Member, Penn State Altoona Faculty Senate.
2010-2011 Organizer of the Penn State Altoona Faculty Senate Social Committee Faculty
Book Club.
2010-2011 Member, Penn State Altoona Faculty Senate Social Committee.
2008-2009 Anatomy and Physiology Faculty Search Committee Member, Penn State Altoona.
2006-2008 Director of Excursions and Scientific Mentor, Building Opportunities and
Overtures in Science and Technology (BOOST) Program, Duke University.
2002-2008 Scientific Technician, Department of Biological Anthropology & Anatomy, Duke
University.
1999-2008 Educational Specialist and Scientific Technician, Duke Lemur Center.
2000-2006 Angier Biddle Duke Scholarship Selection Committee, Duke University.
2001 Curator and Scientific Technician, Human Biology and Anatomy Department,
University of Western Australia, Perth, Australia.
SERVICE TO ACADEMIA AND SOCIETY
2015-2016 Symposium Organizer: “Muscle Functional Morphology Beyond Gross Anatomy.”
International Congress of Vertebrate Morphology, Washington DC, June 29-
July1, 2016
2016-2017 Guest Editor, Special Issue of The Anatomical Record, “Behavioral Correlates of
Muscle Functional Morphology”.
2015-present Member, Conservation Support Fund Committee, Riverbanks Zoo and Garden.
2013-present Editorial Board Member, Anthropology.
2013-2015 Graduate Research Fellowship Program Panelist Reviewer, The National Science
Foundation, Washington DC.
2015 Content consultant, The Guardian.
2015 Symposium Moderator: Annual Meeting of the Society of Vertebrate Morphology.
Dallas, TX. October 15, 2015
2014 Content consultant, The Wonder of Animals, British Broadcasting Corporation
(BBC) Natural History Unit.
2010-2011 Vice President, Carolina Tiger Rescue, Pittsboro, NC.
2009-2011 Member, Board of Directors, Carolina Tiger Rescue, Pittsboro, NC.
2003-2008 Educational Specialist and Scientific Technician, Carnivore Preservation Trust,
Pittsboro, NC.
2001 & 2003 Summer Science Program Educator, Museum of Life and Science, Durham, NC.
1995-1999 Assistant Scientific Technician, American Museum of Natural History, New York,
Anthropology and Mammalogy Departments.
Adam Hartstone-Rose Curriculum Vitae Updated December 2016 Page 29 of 30
SOCIETY MEMBERSHIP
American Association of Anatomists
American Association of Physical Anthropologists
Association of Zoos and Aquariums
Phi Beta Kappa
Sigma Xi
Society of Vertebrate Paleontology
REVIEWER
Anatomical Record
Annals of Plastic Surgery
Annals of the Transvaal Museum
Anthropology
Austin Journal of Anatomy
Comptes Rendus Palevol
Elsevier
Historical Biology
International Journal of Primatology
Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology
Journal of Zoological Sciences
Journal of Anatomy
McGraw-Hill (textbooks and digital media)
National Geographic
Online Journal of Social Sciences Research
PLoS ONE
Palaeontologica Africana
Paleobiology
Rubiq
Springer
Thieme Publishers
PROFESSIONAL ARTISTRY
2016 Lead Artist – Animals, West Coast Fossil Park, Langebaanweg, South Africa.
Contracted to create photorealistic reconstructions of more than a dozen extinct species
from the 5.2 million year old fossil locality, Langebaanweg for a new interpretation
center at the site.
Adam Hartstone-Rose Curriculum Vitae Updated December 2016 Page 30 of 30
2016 Finalist. Top 10 Finalist for 2016 “Vizzies” Award – Best Scientific Illustration category.
National Science Foundation.