Molleson T I
Department of Palaeontology, British Museum (Natural History), London, England.
Anthropol Anz. 1989 Mar;47(1):27-38.
Attempts have been made to reconstruct the Romano-British population that was buried at Poundbury Camp, Dorchester, England. Over 1400 graves were excavated and about 1200 skeletons of adults and juveniles were recovered, dating from the 1st to the 5th Centuries AD. The burial patterns indicate that the family was the important unit in the community that was served by Poundbury Camp. The newborn but perhaps not the stillborn were buried in the cemetery. Infanticide was not practised. Infant mortality was high and weaning may have been at a very early age. There were relatively few children and family sizes must have been small. Among the adolescents there were three times as many girls as boys. This is interpreted as a consequence of the materialism of a society with an agrarian economy.
人们曾试图重建埋葬在英格兰多切斯特庞德伯里营地的罗马 - 不列颠人口。挖掘了1400多个坟墓,找回了约1200具成人和青少年的骨骼,年代可追溯到公元1世纪至5世纪。埋葬模式表明,家庭是庞德伯里营地所服务社区中的重要单位。新生儿而非死产儿被埋葬在墓地。没有杀婴行为。婴儿死亡率很高,断奶可能很早。儿童相对较少,家庭规模一定很小。在青少年中,女孩的数量是男孩的三倍。这被解释为农业经济社会物质主义的结果。