Iroquoian Infant Mortality and Juvenile Growth 1250 to 1700 AD

This thesis investigates changes in Iroquoian infant mortality and juvenile growth between 1250 and 1700 AD in the Lower Great Lakes region of North America. The objectives of this thesis are to investigate the tempo and quality of growth of Iroquoian infants and juveniles; to investigate the relati...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Forrest, Crystal
Other Authors: Pfeiffer, Susan, Anthropology
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published:
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1807/26149
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spelling ftunivtoronto:oai:localhost:1807/26149 2023-05-15T16:17:12+02:00 Iroquoian Infant Mortality and Juvenile Growth 1250 to 1700 AD Forrest, Crystal Pfeiffer, Susan Anthropology NO_RESTRICTION http://hdl.handle.net/1807/26149 en_ca eng http://hdl.handle.net/1807/26149 growth children First Nations Ontario bioarchaeology mortality archaeology infant Iroquoian health burial 0327 Thesis ftunivtoronto 2020-06-17T11:18:32Z This thesis investigates changes in Iroquoian infant mortality and juvenile growth between 1250 and 1700 AD in the Lower Great Lakes region of North America. The objectives of this thesis are to investigate the tempo and quality of growth of Iroquoian infants and juveniles; to investigate the relationship between apparent neonatal and postneonatal mortality and predicted mortality ratios based on equal probability of mortality risk in the first year of life (1:11); and to investigate whether or not the ratio of neonatal to postneonatal mortality changed as a result of cultural change associated with the arrival of Europeans at around 1600 AD. These were investigated using a sample of infant and juvenile remains from twenty-one sites in upper New York state and Ontario. Tempo and quality of growth were examined by comparing femoral length at different ages to the Iroquoian adult femur length endpoint and to the growth patterns established in the Denver Growth Study and in other aboriginal North American archaeological samples. Above average infant growth is attributed to biocultural factors and infant mortality is largely caused by acute conditions. Below average juvenile growth, especially between two and seven years of age, is attributed to nutritional imbalances and overcrowding, poor sanitation, and infectious disease prevalence. Juveniles were likely chronically ill, resulting in poor attainment of stature, and this may have contributed to their deaths early in life. Apparent infant mortality was found to differ from predicted mortality, and this difference was attributed to cultural and environmental mortality biases that make interpretation difficult. Change in infant mortality ratios as a result of cultural change associated with European contact is evident in the Iroquoian context: the lack of neonatal remains in postcontact ossuaries is consistent with the ethnohistoric record, but the high proportion of neonates in precontact ossuaries suggests that observations made by ethnohistoric observers may not be applicable to our understanding of precontact burial patterns. The change in the ratio of neonatal to postneonatal remains in the pre- and postcontact periods is interpreted as evidence of changes in burial patterns rather than change in mortality risk. PhD Thesis First Nations University of Toronto: Research Repository T-Space
institution Open Polar
collection University of Toronto: Research Repository T-Space
op_collection_id ftunivtoronto
language English
topic growth
children
First Nations
Ontario
bioarchaeology
mortality
archaeology
infant
Iroquoian
health
burial
0327
spellingShingle growth
children
First Nations
Ontario
bioarchaeology
mortality
archaeology
infant
Iroquoian
health
burial
0327
Forrest, Crystal
Iroquoian Infant Mortality and Juvenile Growth 1250 to 1700 AD
topic_facet growth
children
First Nations
Ontario
bioarchaeology
mortality
archaeology
infant
Iroquoian
health
burial
0327
description This thesis investigates changes in Iroquoian infant mortality and juvenile growth between 1250 and 1700 AD in the Lower Great Lakes region of North America. The objectives of this thesis are to investigate the tempo and quality of growth of Iroquoian infants and juveniles; to investigate the relationship between apparent neonatal and postneonatal mortality and predicted mortality ratios based on equal probability of mortality risk in the first year of life (1:11); and to investigate whether or not the ratio of neonatal to postneonatal mortality changed as a result of cultural change associated with the arrival of Europeans at around 1600 AD. These were investigated using a sample of infant and juvenile remains from twenty-one sites in upper New York state and Ontario. Tempo and quality of growth were examined by comparing femoral length at different ages to the Iroquoian adult femur length endpoint and to the growth patterns established in the Denver Growth Study and in other aboriginal North American archaeological samples. Above average infant growth is attributed to biocultural factors and infant mortality is largely caused by acute conditions. Below average juvenile growth, especially between two and seven years of age, is attributed to nutritional imbalances and overcrowding, poor sanitation, and infectious disease prevalence. Juveniles were likely chronically ill, resulting in poor attainment of stature, and this may have contributed to their deaths early in life. Apparent infant mortality was found to differ from predicted mortality, and this difference was attributed to cultural and environmental mortality biases that make interpretation difficult. Change in infant mortality ratios as a result of cultural change associated with European contact is evident in the Iroquoian context: the lack of neonatal remains in postcontact ossuaries is consistent with the ethnohistoric record, but the high proportion of neonates in precontact ossuaries suggests that observations made by ethnohistoric observers may not be applicable to our understanding of precontact burial patterns. The change in the ratio of neonatal to postneonatal remains in the pre- and postcontact periods is interpreted as evidence of changes in burial patterns rather than change in mortality risk. PhD
author2 Pfeiffer, Susan
Anthropology
format Thesis
author Forrest, Crystal
author_facet Forrest, Crystal
author_sort Forrest, Crystal
title Iroquoian Infant Mortality and Juvenile Growth 1250 to 1700 AD
title_short Iroquoian Infant Mortality and Juvenile Growth 1250 to 1700 AD
title_full Iroquoian Infant Mortality and Juvenile Growth 1250 to 1700 AD
title_fullStr Iroquoian Infant Mortality and Juvenile Growth 1250 to 1700 AD
title_full_unstemmed Iroquoian Infant Mortality and Juvenile Growth 1250 to 1700 AD
title_sort iroquoian infant mortality and juvenile growth 1250 to 1700 ad
publishDate
url http://hdl.handle.net/1807/26149
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/1807/26149
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