Buckley Hallie Ruth, Roberts Phillip, Kinaston Rebecca, Petchey Peter, King Charlotte, Domett Kate, Snoddy Anne Marie, Matisoo-Smith Elizabeth
Department of Anatomy, School of Biomedical Sciences, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand.
School of Culture, History and Language, College of Asia & the Pacific, The Australian National University, Canberra, Australia.
J R Soc N Z. 2020 Nov 12;52(1):68-94. doi: 10.1080/03036758.2020.1837189. eCollection 2022.
During the nineteenth century, New Zealand was promoted as a land of plenty, promising a 'better life', to encourage families to settle and develop the growing colony. This paper characterises the life-course of early settlers to New Zealand through historical epidemiological and osteological analyses of the St John's burial ground in Milton, Otago. These people represent some of the first European colonists to Aotearoa, and their children. The analyses provided glimpses into the past of strenuous manual labour, repeated risk of injury, and oral and skeletal infections. Mortality of infants was very high in the skeletal sample and the death certificates outlined the varied risks of infection and accidents they faced. Osteobiographies of seven well-preserved adults demonstrated the detailed narratives that can be gleaned from careful consideration of individuals. The skeletal record indicates childhood stress affecting growth and risk of injury prior to migration. However, the historical record suggests that occupational risks of death to the working class were similar in the new colony as at home. The snapshot of this Victorian-era population provided by these data suggests that the colonial society transported their biosocial landscape upon immigration and little changed for these initial colonists.
在19世纪,新西兰被宣传为一个物产丰饶的土地,承诺能带来“更好的生活”,以此鼓励家庭前来定居并发展这个不断壮大的殖民地。本文通过对奥塔哥米尔顿圣约翰墓地进行历史流行病学和骨学分析,刻画了早期新西兰定居者的生命历程。这些人代表了最早一批来到奥特亚罗瓦的欧洲殖民者及其子女。分析让我们得以瞥见过去艰苦的体力劳动、反复受伤的风险以及口腔和骨骼感染的情况。骨骼样本中婴儿死亡率非常高,死亡证明列出了他们面临的各种感染和事故风险。对七具保存完好的成年人骨骼的骨传记展示了通过仔细研究个体所能收集到的详细故事。骨骼记录显示童年压力影响生长以及移民前受伤的风险。然而,历史记录表明,工人阶级在新殖民地面临的职业死亡风险与在国内相似。这些数据提供的这个维多利亚时代人口的快照表明,殖民社会在移民时移植了他们的生物社会格局,而对于这些最初的殖民者来说变化不大。