TY - JOUR
T1 - Identification of the Archaeological 'Invisible Elderly'
T2 - An Approach Illustrated with an Anglo-Saxon Example
AU - Cave, C.
AU - Oxenham, M.
N1 - Acknowledgements
Thank you to the Duckworth Laboratory, Cambridge, and staff for access to the Worthy Park material and laboratory space in which to examine it.
This paper was made possible, in part, by an Australian Research Council grant: FT 120100299.
PY - 2016/1
Y1 - 2016/1
N2 - The aim of this paper is to present a method to facilitate age-at-death estimation of older individuals (generally those aged 50+years) in a representative cemetery sample. The purpose of disaggregating catch-all categories, such as 50+years, is to enable the exploration of the elderly (those in their 50s, 60s, 70s or 80s) in the context of mortuary archaeology, bioarchaeology and/or palaeopathology. The methodological steps include the following: (1) assessment of occlusal tooth wear in an Anglo-Saxon cemetery sample from Worthy Park, UK; (2) seriation of the sample, from youngest to oldest, based on the degree of tooth wear; (3) selection of an ethnographically derived model (known mortality profile) by which seriated individuals in the Worthy Park sample could be reallocated to more realistic or appropriate age classes; (4) reallocation of individuals in the seriated Worthy Park sample to the model age classes. A Hadza, Tanzania, hunter-gatherer profile was chosen to model the Worthy Park sample, although others are available. By using this model, some 66% of the entire adult sample, originally allocated to the single final age category of 45+years, was distributed across four new age categories from the mid-40s to mid-70s. Relatively straightforward, this approach provides a way to identify those individuals, 50+years old, not normally sensitive to traditional age-at-death estimation methodologies currently available.
AB - The aim of this paper is to present a method to facilitate age-at-death estimation of older individuals (generally those aged 50+years) in a representative cemetery sample. The purpose of disaggregating catch-all categories, such as 50+years, is to enable the exploration of the elderly (those in their 50s, 60s, 70s or 80s) in the context of mortuary archaeology, bioarchaeology and/or palaeopathology. The methodological steps include the following: (1) assessment of occlusal tooth wear in an Anglo-Saxon cemetery sample from Worthy Park, UK; (2) seriation of the sample, from youngest to oldest, based on the degree of tooth wear; (3) selection of an ethnographically derived model (known mortality profile) by which seriated individuals in the Worthy Park sample could be reallocated to more realistic or appropriate age classes; (4) reallocation of individuals in the seriated Worthy Park sample to the model age classes. A Hadza, Tanzania, hunter-gatherer profile was chosen to model the Worthy Park sample, although others are available. By using this model, some 66% of the entire adult sample, originally allocated to the single final age category of 45+years, was distributed across four new age categories from the mid-40s to mid-70s. Relatively straightforward, this approach provides a way to identify those individuals, 50+years old, not normally sensitive to traditional age-at-death estimation methodologies currently available.
KW - Age at death
KW - Mortality profiles
KW - Old age
KW - Worthy Park
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85000631226&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1002/oa.2408
DO - 10.1002/oa.2408
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85000631226
VL - 26
SP - 163
EP - 175
JO - International journal of osteoarchaeology
JF - International journal of osteoarchaeology
SN - 1047-482X
IS - 1
ER -