Rr. Paine et Hc. Harpending, ASSESSING THE RELIABILITY OF PALEODEMOGRAPHIC FERTILITY ESTIMATORS USING SIMULATED SKELETAL DISTRIBUTIONS, American journal of physical anthropology, 101(2), 1996, pp. 151-159
The reliability of published paleodemographic fertility reconstruction
methods was assessed using simulated age-at-death distributions and a
published cemetery series from a population with known birth rates. I
n the first test, the Brass ([1971] Biological Aspects of Demography,
pp. 69-110) LOGIT models were used to generate 180 simulated skeletal
samples of various sizes (N = 50, 100, 250) from hypothetical populati
ons with known demographic rates. The base populations were expanding
(r = 0.01), stationary, or declining (r = -0.01), yet all had the same
life expectancy. Growth differences resulted from different fertility
rates. The simulated skeletal series were then analyzed using the mod
el life table fitting procedure outlined by Paine ([1989a] Am. J. Phys
. Anthropol. 79:51-62), three commonly employed age ratio tests (Bocqu
et-Appel and Masset [1892] J. Hum. Evol. 11:321-333; Buikstra et al. [
1986] Am. Antiquity 51:528-546), and one age-at-death ratio not previo
usly published. In the second test the model life table fitting proced
ure was used to estimate fertility for a historical population, the Ne
wton Plantation, Barbados (Corruccini et al. [1989] Am. Antiquity 54:6
09-614), with known demographic characteristics. (C) 1996 Wiley-Liss,
Inc.