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Recent Advances in Palaeodemography : Data, Techniques, Patterns / edited by Jean-Pierre Bocquet-Appel.

Por: Colaborador(es): Tipo de material: TextoTextoEditor: Dordrecht : Springer Netherlands, 2008Descripción: recurso en líneaTipo de contenido:
  • texto
Tipo de medio:
  • computadora
Tipo de portador:
  • recurso en línea
ISBN:
  • 9781402064241
Formatos físicos adicionales: Edición impresa:: Sin títuloClasificación LoC:
  • CC1-960
Recursos en línea:
Contenidos:
From Genes to Numbers: Effective Population Sizes in Human Evolution -- Assessment of Land Surveys in Greece: Contributions and Limitations -- Estimation of An Age Distribution With Its Confidence Intervals Using An Iterative Bayesian Procedure and A Bootstrap Sampling Approach -- Model Life Tables for Pre-Industrial Populations: First Application in Palaeodemography -- The Halley Band for Paleodemographic Mortality Analysis -- Modeling Paleolithic Predator-Prey Dynamics and the Effects of Hunting Pressure on Prey ‘Choice’ -- The Demography of Prehistoric Fishing/Hunting People: A Case Study of the Upper Columbia Area -- The Paleodemography of Central Portugal and the Mesolithic-Neolithic Transition -- The Libben Site: a Hunting, Fishing, and Gathering Village from the Eastern Late Woodlands of North America. Analysis and Implications for Palaeodemography and Human Origins -- Demographic and Health Changes During the Transition to Agriculture in North America.
Resumen: The written data used by demographers essentially cover the last five centuries. Since Homo Ergaster moved out of Africa around 1.8 million years ago and until the sub-contemporary periods, there is no data allowing us to reconstruct a demographic history that can be interpreted with the traditional tools of demography. If we want to be able to tackle demographic issues over a long evolutionary duration, trying to reconstitute our human demographic history and thinking out and testing macro-demographic theories, we need to draw on sources other than written data and on techniques other than those commonly used by demographers. This necessarily means using information of every kind, from archaeology, physical anthropology, paleontology, primatology or genetics, along with relevant models of interpretation. This book has been developed from a core of papers selected for the paleodemographic session of the 25th World Population Congress (July 2005, Tours, France). It covers recent paleodemographic innovations, in terms of data, techniques and the detection of patterns making it possible to highlight hitherto unknown prehistoric demographic processes.
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Springer eBooks

From Genes to Numbers: Effective Population Sizes in Human Evolution -- Assessment of Land Surveys in Greece: Contributions and Limitations -- Estimation of An Age Distribution With Its Confidence Intervals Using An Iterative Bayesian Procedure and A Bootstrap Sampling Approach -- Model Life Tables for Pre-Industrial Populations: First Application in Palaeodemography -- The Halley Band for Paleodemographic Mortality Analysis -- Modeling Paleolithic Predator-Prey Dynamics and the Effects of Hunting Pressure on Prey ‘Choice’ -- The Demography of Prehistoric Fishing/Hunting People: A Case Study of the Upper Columbia Area -- The Paleodemography of Central Portugal and the Mesolithic-Neolithic Transition -- The Libben Site: a Hunting, Fishing, and Gathering Village from the Eastern Late Woodlands of North America. Analysis and Implications for Palaeodemography and Human Origins -- Demographic and Health Changes During the Transition to Agriculture in North America.

The written data used by demographers essentially cover the last five centuries. Since Homo Ergaster moved out of Africa around 1.8 million years ago and until the sub-contemporary periods, there is no data allowing us to reconstruct a demographic history that can be interpreted with the traditional tools of demography. If we want to be able to tackle demographic issues over a long evolutionary duration, trying to reconstitute our human demographic history and thinking out and testing macro-demographic theories, we need to draw on sources other than written data and on techniques other than those commonly used by demographers. This necessarily means using information of every kind, from archaeology, physical anthropology, paleontology, primatology or genetics, along with relevant models of interpretation. This book has been developed from a core of papers selected for the paleodemographic session of the 25th World Population Congress (July 2005, Tours, France). It covers recent paleodemographic innovations, in terms of data, techniques and the detection of patterns making it possible to highlight hitherto unknown prehistoric demographic processes.

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