Publication | Closed Access
Fertility and the Development of Agriculture in the Prehistoric Midwest
236
Citations
90
References
1986
Year
FertilityAgricultural EconomicsArchaeologyDomesticationBioarchaeologyFarming SystemDemographic MeasurementsBiostatisticsLanguage StudiesPublic HealthDemographic ForecastingFertility IncreasePrehistoric MidwestDemographic ChangeGeographyPopulation StudyAgricultural HistoryDemographic ProcessPopulation HistoryPaleodemographic StudyPopulation DevelopmentAnthropologyDemographyRelative Fertility Rates
In this article we develop and apply a method for estimating fertility in paleodemographic study. The proportion D30+/D5+, generated from standard life table calculations, is used to estimate relative fertility rates for eight Woodland and Mississippian populations represented by skeletal series from west-central Illinois. The inferred pattern of fertility increase through time is then considered in the context of key variables that define diet, technology, and sedentism. We conclude that changes in diet or food preparation techniques are implicated in this demographic change. The absence of a significant increment in juvenile mortality in association with the elevated fertility rates suggests that these changes in fertility explain the regional population increase previously inferred from mortuary and habitation site densities.
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