Mortality in Traditional Hunter-Gatherer, Pastoralist and Agriculturalist Communities: The Validity of Longevity Studies Based on Mobility and Subsistence Strategies

  • Hewitt B
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Abstract

This paper will address the observable discrepancies in the mortality of populations who use differing subsistence strategies, and determine if subsistence patterns and/or mobility are reliable variables to consider in longevity and morality studies. Through an analysis of the data presented by a number of different authors on average life expectancy of highly mobile hunter-gatherer groups, semi-nomadic pastoralists and horticulturalists, and sedentary agriculturalists, a comparison of life spans across subsistence and mobility patterns should be possible. The soundness of studies based on these variables will be assessed, as will comparability or such studies.

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Hewitt, B. R. (2003). Mortality in Traditional Hunter-Gatherer, Pastoralist and Agriculturalist Communities: The Validity of Longevity Studies Based on Mobility and Subsistence Strategies. NEXUS: The Canadian Student Journal of Anthropology, 16(1). https://doi.org/10.15173/nexus.v16i1.183

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