Henry B. Zenk (born 1944) is an American linguist and anthropologist whose work focuses on Indigenous languages of the Pacific Northwest, including Chinuk Wawa and Kalapuyan languages. He has served as a linguistic consultant for the Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde since 1998.
Zenk completed an M.A. thesis in anthropology at Portland State University in 1976. According to The Oregon Encyclopedia, he earned a Ph.D. in anthropology at the University of Oregon in 1984, drawing on field documentation of Chinuk Wawa with elder speakers in the Grand Ronde community.
The Oregon Encyclopedia describes Zenk as documenting Chinuk Wawa with surviving first-language elder speakers of the Grand Ronde community and notes that this documentation informed his doctoral research; it further states that he has served as a linguistic consultant for the Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde since 1998.
A 2011 report in Smoke Signals (the newspaper of the Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde) describes Zenk as an anthropologist with a University of Oregon Ph.D. (1984), notes that he first came to Grand Ronde in 1978, and reports that he had worked on the tribe's Chinuk Wawa dictionary effort since 1998.
Zenk has also written for public-facing venues on the history and use of Chinuk Wawa in Oregon. For example, he authored an overview entry on Chinuk Wawa for The Oregon Encyclopedia. In 2022, Oregon Public Broadcasting described him as a âÂÂforemost authority on Oregon Indigenous languages,â in the context of Kalapuya documentation and revitalization efforts.