Johansson S R, Horowitz S
Am J Phys Anthropol. 1986 Oct;71(2):233-50. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.1330710211.
Traditional paleodemographic methods of estimating mortality have been based on unrealistic assumptions about the prevalence of closed and stationary populations. When a living closed population was growing, the mean age at death of its skeletal survivors will be shifted below its true life expectancy. For declining populations, the mean age at death will be higher than true underlying life expectancy at birth. The faster the rate of growth, the larger and more curvilinear is the displacement. Mortality estimates can only be extracted from skeletal populations via an independent estimate of the growth rate. Fertility levels, however, can be estimated directly. The empirical importance of growth rate-dependent mortality estimates is demonstrated by reinterpreting mean-age-at-death data from several populations before and after the agricultural revolution; with detailed consideration given to the Old World populations of Acsadi and Nemeskeri and a New World population from central Illinois.
传统的估计死亡率的古人口统计学方法一直基于关于封闭和静止人口患病率的不切实际假设。当一个现存的封闭人口在增长时,其骨骼幸存者的平均死亡年龄将低于其真实预期寿命。对于人口下降的情况,平均死亡年龄将高于出生时的真实潜在预期寿命。增长速度越快,这种偏差就越大且越呈曲线状。死亡率估计只能通过对增长率的独立估计从骨骼人口中得出。然而,生育率水平可以直接估计。通过重新解释农业革命前后几个人口的平均死亡年龄数据,证明了依赖增长率的死亡率估计的实证重要性;并详细考虑了阿卡萨迪和内梅斯凯里的旧世界人口以及伊利诺伊州中部的一个新世界人口。