Demography in archaeology:
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
---|---|
Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Cambridge [u.a.]
Cambridge Univ. Press
2006
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Ausgabe: | 1. publ. |
Schriftenreihe: | Cambridge manuals in archaeology
|
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | XIX, 235 S. Ill., graph. Darst. |
ISBN: | 0521593670 0521596513 9780521593670 9780521596510 |
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245 | 1 | 0 | |a Demography in archaeology |c Andrew T. Chamberlain |
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264 | 1 | |a Cambridge [u.a.] |b Cambridge Univ. Press |c 2006 | |
300 | |a XIX, 235 S. |b Ill., graph. Darst. | ||
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CONTENTS List of figures page xiii
List of tables xvi
Preface xviii
1 INTRODUCTION i
1.1 The principal concerns of demography 1
1.1.1 What is a population? l
1.1.2 Population characteristics 2
1.1.3 Demographic data: from individual life histories
to population parameters 3
1.2 Demography in archaeology 4
1.2.1 Archaeology and people 4
1.2.2 Population pressure: cause or effect? 4
1.2.3 Population structure 6
1.2.4 Health and disease 7
1.2.5 Migration 8
1.3 Sources of evidence 10
1.3.1 Theoretical models 10
1.3.2 Ethnographic and historical evidence 11
1.3.3 Archaeological evidence: skeletal remains,
settlements and site catchments 11
1.3.4 Genetic and evolutionary evidence 12
1.3.5 Evidence from disease 13
viii CONTENTS
2 DEMOGRAPHIC CONCEPTS, THEORY
AND METHODS 15
2.1 Population structure 15
2.1.1 Age categories and age distributions 15
2.1.2 Sex distributions 18
2.1.3 Other structuring categories 19
2.2 Population growth and demographic transition 19
2.2.1 Geometric and exponential growth 19
2.2.2 Logistic growth 21
2.2.3 Demographic transition 23
2.3 Mortality, survivorship and life tables 25
2.3.1 Mortality 25
2.3.2 Survivorship 25
2.3.3 Stable populations 26
2.3.4 The life table 27
2.3.5 Hazard functions for modelling mortality and
survivorship 32
2.4 Fertility and population projection 35
2.4.1 Fertility 35
2.4.2 Population projection 36
2.5 Migration and colonisation 38
2.5.1 Migration 38
2.5.2 Colonisation 40
2.6 Population standardisation and comparison 41
2.6.1 Population standardisation 41
2.6.2 Population comparison 43
3 HISTORICAL AND ETHNOGRAPHIC
DEMOGRAPHY 45
3.1 Documentary sources of demographic data 45
3.1.1 Vital registration 45
3.1.2 Censuses 46
CONTENTS ix
3.1.3 Commemorative inscriptions 47
3.1.4 Other written sources 48
3.2 Families and households 50
3.2.1 Family units 50
3.2.2 Family reconstitution 50
3.2.3 Household size 52
3.3 Longevity, menarche and menopause 52
3.3.1 Perceptions and misperceptions of
longevity 52
3.3.2 Menarche and menopause 54
3.4 Historical evidence of migration and colonisation 55
3.4.1 Migration in pre industrial Europe 55
3.4.2 Mass migration and colonisation in the
modern era 57
3.5 Hunter gatherer demography 58
3.5.1 Population structure in hunter gatherers 58
3.5.2 Mortality and fertility in hunter gatherers 62
3.6 Demography of agricultural populations 64
3.6.1 Population structure in agricultural
populations 64
3.6.2 Mortality and fertility in agricultural
populations 67
3.7 Conditions of high mortality 69
3.7.1 Crisis mortality and natural disasters 69
3.7.2 Famine 70
3.7.3 Epidemic disease 74
3.7.4 Conflict mortality 77
4 ARCHAEOLOGICAL DEMOGRAPHY 81
4.1 Past population structure 81
4.1.1 Background to the palaeodemography debate 81
4.1.2 The challenge by Bocquet Appel and Masset 84
X CONTENTS
4.1.3 Uniformitarian assumptions in palaeodemography 87
4.1.4 Bias in samples and in estimation 89
4.2 Estimation of sex 92
4.2.1 Human sex differences 92
4.2.2 Morphological sex differences in pre adolescent
skeletons 93
4.2.3 Morphological sex differences in adult skeletons 95
4.2.4 Accuracy of sex estimation 97
4.2.5 Biomolecular methods of sex estimation 97
4.3 Estimation of age at death 98
4.3.1 Human skeletal development and ageing 98
4.3.2 Age estimation in fetuses and children 101
4.3.3 Age estimation in adults: macroscopic methods 105
4.3.4 Age estimation in adults: microscopic methods 110
4.4 Bayesian and maximum likelihood approaches to age
estimation 112
4.4.1 General principles in estimating age from
morphological indicators 112
4.4.2 Bayes' theorem and its application to age
estimation 113
4.4.3 Evaluative studies of Bayesian methods in age
estimation 116
4.4.4 Alternative ways of modelling likelihoods:
transition analysis and latent traits 119
4.4.5 Perinatal age estimation from long bone length 120
4.4.6 Age estimation and catastrophic mortality
profiles 123
4.4.7 Prospects for the future 125
4.5 Estimation of population numbers from archaeological
data 126
4.5.1 House sizes and floor areas 126
4.5.2 Settlement sizes 127
4 5 3 Site catchments and resource utilisation 128
CONTENTS Xi
4.5.4 Monitoring population size from radiocarbon
dating distributions 131
5 EVOLUTIONARY AND GENETIC
PALAEODEMOGRAPHY 133
5.1 Age and sex structure in animal populations 133
5.1.1 Natural animal populations 133
5.1.2 Demography of non human primates 134
5.2 Demography of fossil hominids 137
5.2.1 Maturation times and longevity in fossil
hominids 137
5.2.2 Demography of Australopithecus and early Homo 140
5.2.3 Demography of Homo heidelbergensis and Homo
neanderthalensis 143
5.3 Human genetic palaeodemography 146
5.3.1 Genetic studies of present day populations 146
5.3.2 Genetic studies of ancient populations 148
6 DEMOGRAPHY AND DISEASE 151
6.1 Disease in archaeological populations 151
6.1.1 Concepts and evidence of disease 151
6.1.2 Infectious and epidemic diseases 154
6.1.3 Metabolic, nutritional and deficiency diseases 160
6.1.4 Neoplastic and congenital diseases 165
6.1.5 Trauma and homicide 168
6.2 Social and demographic impacts of disease 172
6.2.1 Demographic responses to disease 172
6.2.2 Social responses to disease 173
7 CONCLUDING REMARKS 177
7.1 The relevance of demography for archaeology 177
7.2 How meaningful are the results of palaeodemographic
analysis? 179
Xii CONTENTS
7.3 How different were populations in the past? 180
7.4 Demographic processes and cultural change 183
7.5 Challenges for the future 185
References 189
Index 225
FIGURES 2.1 Age distribution in the Ache, a hunter gatherer group in
eastern Paraguay. page 16
2.2 Triangular graph of mortality depicting the relative
proportions of juvenile, prime adult and old adult
individuals. 18
2.3 Exponential and logistic growth. 21
2.4 Estimated population growth in England and Wales between
AD 1100 and 1800. 22
2.5 Population transition in France, eighteenth and nineteenth
centuries. 24
2.6 Age specific mortality in female Ache hunter gatherers. 34
2.7 Examples of the general pattern of age specific variation in
human female fertility. 36
2.8 Age specific migration rates in Australia. 39
2.9 Survivorship at the Tlajinga 33 apartment compound at
Teotihuacan, Mexico. 43
3.1 Age heaping and year avoidance in the burial registers from a
nineteenth century hospital. 46
3.2 Age specific probability of death calculated from Roman
tombstone inscriptions. 49
3.3 Age structures of four hunter gatherer populations. 61
xiv FIGURES
3.4 Age specific probability of death in three hunter gatherer
populations. 64
3.5 Age specific fertility in hunter gatherer women. 65
3.6 Age structure in agricultural populations. 66
3.7 Survivorship in agricultural populations. 67
3.8 Age specific fertility in women from agricultural
populations. 68
3.9 Age specific mortality in catastrophic floods. 71
3.10 Age specific mortality during famines in Berar
province, India. 72
3.11 Crude birth and death rates in Berar province, India. 73
3.12 Age specific death rates from influenza. 75
3.13 Distribution of deaths from plague in Penrith. 76
3.14 Age distribution of civilian deaths in Srebrenica. 79
3.15 Age distribution of combatant deaths. 80
4.1 Age specific mortality (percentage of deaths) in the
Libben cemetery. 83
4.2 Juvenility index in stable populations with different mortality
levels and rates of population growth. 86
4.3 Age specific mortality in four archaeological samples of
human skeletal remains. 90
4.4 Age specific mortality in hunter gatherers and subsistence
agriculturalists. 91
4.5 Unfused epiphysis at the proximal end of the femur. 100
4.6 Growth profiles constructed from archaeological samples of
skeletal remains, compared to the modern Denver growth
standard. 104
4.7 Age related changes in the pubic symphysis. 107
4.8 Pattern of wear on the occlusal surfaces of the lower teeth. 109
4.9 Estimated distribution of age at death for Loisy en Brie. 118
4.10 Distribution of gestational ages estimated from the
diaphyseal lengths of femurs. 124
FIGURES XV
4.11 Distribution of adult ages at death for two catastrophic
skeletal assemblages. 125
4.12 Proxy archaeological data indicating relative changes in
population size in Roman London. 130
4.13 Distribution of HC dates obtained on human bone from
Mesolithic and early Neolithic archaeological sites in Britain. 131
5.1 Survivorship curves and average mortality for natural cervid
populations. 134
5.2 Survivorship curves for cercopithecine monkeys, Pan
troglodytes and Homo sapiens. 136
5.3 Survivorship curves for cercopithecine monkeys, Pan
troglodytes and Homo sapiens, compared to a common
developmental scale. 137
5.4 Age distributions in samples of Homo heidelbergensis and
Homo neanderthalensis. 144
6.1 Osteomyelitis in an arm bone. 155
6.2 Season of mortality in Rome. 160
6.3 Cribra orbitalia. 163
6.4 Nitrogen isotope ratios in infant skeletons. 166
TABLES _
2.1 Changes in population parameters during the
demographic transition. page 23
2.2 Life table for Northern Ache females. 29
2.3 Leslie matrix for Northern Ache females. 37
2.4 Comparison of mortality in the Early Period (AD 300 550)
and the Late Period (AD 550 700) at the Tlajinga 33 site at
Teotihuacan, Mexico. 42
3.1 Data recorded on a family reconstitution form (FRF). 51
3.2 Population structure from census data for hunter gatherer
and subsistence farming populations. 59
3.3 Age specific risk of death in hunter gatherer populations. 63
4.1 Factors contributing to differences between the skeletons of
human adult males and females. 94
4.2 Options for the selection of prior probabilities of age in
Bayesian age estimation. 116
4.3 Distribution of femoral head trabecular involution in a
reference series. 117
4.4 Diaphyseal length of femurs in known age individuals. 121
4.5 Posterior probabilities of gestational age given femur length. 122
5.1 Average duration (in years) of the formation of teeth. 139
5.2 Numbers and proportions of old adults in mortality samples. 140
5.3 Proportions of subadults in samples of fossil hominids. 142
TABLES XVil
5.4 Distributions of age at death in Homo heidelbergensis and
Homo neanderthalensis. 143
6.1 Changes in prevalence of selected health conditions at the
transition from foraging to farming. 159
6.2 Modern frequencies of congenital diseases (per thousand live
births) that are diagnosable from skeletal remains. 167
6.3 Proportions of juveniles and of adult females in skeletal
assemblages from European prehistoric conflict sites. 171 |
adam_txt |
CONTENTS List of figures page xiii
List of tables xvi
Preface xviii
1 INTRODUCTION i
1.1 The principal concerns of demography 1
1.1.1 What is a population? l
1.1.2 Population characteristics 2
1.1.3 Demographic data: from individual life histories
to population parameters 3
1.2 Demography in archaeology 4
1.2.1 Archaeology and people 4
1.2.2 Population pressure: cause or effect? 4
1.2.3 Population structure 6
1.2.4 Health and disease 7
1.2.5 Migration 8
1.3 Sources of evidence 10
1.3.1 Theoretical models 10
1.3.2 Ethnographic and historical evidence 11
1.3.3 Archaeological evidence: skeletal remains,
settlements and site catchments 11
1.3.4 Genetic and evolutionary evidence 12
1.3.5 Evidence from disease 13
viii CONTENTS
2 DEMOGRAPHIC CONCEPTS, THEORY
AND METHODS 15
2.1 Population structure 15
2.1.1 Age categories and age distributions 15
2.1.2 Sex distributions 18
2.1.3 Other structuring categories 19
2.2 Population growth and demographic transition 19
2.2.1 Geometric and exponential growth 19
2.2.2 Logistic growth 21
2.2.3 Demographic transition 23
2.3 Mortality, survivorship and life tables 25
2.3.1 Mortality 25
2.3.2 Survivorship 25
2.3.3 Stable populations 26
2.3.4 The life table 27
2.3.5 Hazard functions for modelling mortality and
survivorship 32
2.4 Fertility and population projection 35
2.4.1 Fertility 35
2.4.2 Population projection 36
2.5 Migration and colonisation 38
2.5.1 Migration 38
2.5.2 Colonisation 40
2.6 Population standardisation and comparison 41
2.6.1 Population standardisation 41
2.6.2 Population comparison 43
3 HISTORICAL AND ETHNOGRAPHIC
DEMOGRAPHY 45
3.1 Documentary sources of demographic data 45
3.1.1 Vital registration 45
3.1.2 Censuses 46
CONTENTS ix
3.1.3 Commemorative inscriptions 47
3.1.4 Other written sources 48
3.2 Families and households 50
3.2.1 Family units 50
3.2.2 Family reconstitution 50
3.2.3 Household size 52
3.3 Longevity, menarche and menopause 52
3.3.1 Perceptions and misperceptions of
longevity 52
3.3.2 Menarche and menopause 54
3.4 Historical evidence of migration and colonisation 55
3.4.1 Migration in pre industrial Europe 55
3.4.2 Mass migration and colonisation in the
modern era 57
3.5 Hunter gatherer demography 58
3.5.1 Population structure in hunter gatherers 58
3.5.2 Mortality and fertility in hunter gatherers 62
3.6 Demography of agricultural populations 64
3.6.1 Population structure in agricultural
populations 64
3.6.2 Mortality and fertility in agricultural
populations 67
3.7 Conditions of high mortality 69
3.7.1 Crisis mortality and natural disasters 69
3.7.2 Famine 70
3.7.3 Epidemic disease 74
3.7.4 Conflict mortality 77
4 ARCHAEOLOGICAL DEMOGRAPHY 81
4.1 Past population structure 81
4.1.1 Background to the palaeodemography debate 81
4.1.2 The challenge by Bocquet Appel and Masset 84
X CONTENTS
4.1.3 Uniformitarian assumptions in palaeodemography 87
4.1.4 Bias in samples and in estimation 89
4.2 Estimation of sex 92
4.2.1 Human sex differences 92
4.2.2 Morphological sex differences in pre adolescent
skeletons 93
4.2.3 Morphological sex differences in adult skeletons 95
4.2.4 Accuracy of sex estimation 97
4.2.5 Biomolecular methods of sex estimation 97
4.3 Estimation of age at death 98
4.3.1 Human skeletal development and ageing 98
4.3.2 Age estimation in fetuses and children 101
4.3.3 Age estimation in adults: macroscopic methods 105
4.3.4 Age estimation in adults: microscopic methods 110
4.4 Bayesian and maximum likelihood approaches to age
estimation 112
4.4.1 General principles in estimating age from
morphological indicators 112
4.4.2 Bayes' theorem and its application to age
estimation 113
4.4.3 Evaluative studies of Bayesian methods in age
estimation 116
4.4.4 Alternative ways of modelling likelihoods:
transition analysis and latent traits 119
4.4.5 Perinatal age estimation from long bone length 120
4.4.6 Age estimation and catastrophic mortality
profiles 123
4.4.7 Prospects for the future 125
4.5 Estimation of population numbers from archaeological
data 126
4.5.1 House sizes and floor areas 126
4.5.2 Settlement sizes 127
4 5 3 Site catchments and resource utilisation 128
CONTENTS Xi
4.5.4 Monitoring population size from radiocarbon
dating distributions 131
5 EVOLUTIONARY AND GENETIC
PALAEODEMOGRAPHY 133
5.1 Age and sex structure in animal populations 133
5.1.1 Natural animal populations 133
5.1.2 Demography of non human primates 134
5.2 Demography of fossil hominids 137
5.2.1 Maturation times and longevity in fossil
hominids 137
5.2.2 Demography of Australopithecus and early Homo 140
5.2.3 Demography of Homo heidelbergensis and Homo
neanderthalensis 143
5.3 Human genetic palaeodemography 146
5.3.1 Genetic studies of present day populations 146
5.3.2 Genetic studies of ancient populations 148
6 DEMOGRAPHY AND DISEASE 151
6.1 Disease in archaeological populations 151
6.1.1 Concepts and evidence of disease 151
6.1.2 Infectious and epidemic diseases 154
6.1.3 Metabolic, nutritional and deficiency diseases 160
6.1.4 Neoplastic and congenital diseases 165
6.1.5 Trauma and homicide 168
6.2 Social and demographic impacts of disease 172
6.2.1 Demographic responses to disease 172
6.2.2 Social responses to disease 173
7 CONCLUDING REMARKS 177
7.1 The relevance of demography for archaeology 177
7.2 How meaningful are the results of palaeodemographic
analysis? 179
Xii CONTENTS
7.3 How different were populations in the past? 180
7.4 Demographic processes and cultural change 183
7.5 Challenges for the future 185
References 189
Index 225
FIGURES 2.1 Age distribution in the Ache, a hunter gatherer group in
eastern Paraguay. page 16
2.2 Triangular graph of mortality depicting the relative
proportions of juvenile, prime adult and old adult
individuals. 18
2.3 Exponential and logistic growth. 21
2.4 Estimated population growth in England and Wales between
AD 1100 and 1800. 22
2.5 Population transition in France, eighteenth and nineteenth
centuries. 24
2.6 Age specific mortality in female Ache hunter gatherers. 34
2.7 Examples of the general pattern of age specific variation in
human female fertility. 36
2.8 Age specific migration rates in Australia. 39
2.9 Survivorship at the Tlajinga 33 apartment compound at
Teotihuacan, Mexico. 43
3.1 Age heaping and year avoidance in the burial registers from a
nineteenth century hospital. 46
3.2 Age specific probability of death calculated from Roman
tombstone inscriptions. 49
3.3 Age structures of four hunter gatherer populations. 61
xiv FIGURES
3.4 Age specific probability of death in three hunter gatherer
populations. 64
3.5 Age specific fertility in hunter gatherer women. 65
3.6 Age structure in agricultural populations. 66
3.7 Survivorship in agricultural populations. 67
3.8 Age specific fertility in women from agricultural
populations. 68
3.9 Age specific mortality in catastrophic floods. 71
3.10 Age specific mortality during famines in Berar
province, India. 72
3.11 Crude birth and death rates in Berar province, India. 73
3.12 Age specific death rates from influenza. 75
3.13 Distribution of deaths from plague in Penrith. 76
3.14 Age distribution of civilian deaths in Srebrenica. 79
3.15 Age distribution of combatant deaths. 80
4.1 Age specific mortality (percentage of deaths) in the
Libben cemetery. 83
4.2 Juvenility index in stable populations with different mortality
levels and rates of population growth. 86
4.3 Age specific mortality in four archaeological samples of
human skeletal remains. 90
4.4 Age specific mortality in hunter gatherers and subsistence
agriculturalists. 91
4.5 Unfused epiphysis at the proximal end of the femur. 100
4.6 Growth profiles constructed from archaeological samples of
skeletal remains, compared to the modern Denver growth
standard. 104
4.7 Age related changes in the pubic symphysis. 107
4.8 Pattern of wear on the occlusal surfaces of the lower teeth. 109
4.9 Estimated distribution of age at death for Loisy en Brie. 118
4.10 Distribution of gestational ages estimated from the
diaphyseal lengths of femurs. 124
FIGURES XV
4.11 Distribution of adult ages at death for two catastrophic
skeletal assemblages. 125
4.12 Proxy archaeological data indicating relative changes in
population size in Roman London. 130
4.13 Distribution of HC dates obtained on human bone from
Mesolithic and early Neolithic archaeological sites in Britain. 131
5.1 Survivorship curves and average mortality for natural cervid
populations. 134
5.2 Survivorship curves for cercopithecine monkeys, Pan
troglodytes and Homo sapiens. 136
5.3 Survivorship curves for cercopithecine monkeys, Pan
troglodytes and Homo sapiens, compared to a common
developmental scale. 137
5.4 Age distributions in samples of Homo heidelbergensis and
Homo neanderthalensis. 144
6.1 Osteomyelitis in an arm bone. 155
6.2 Season of mortality in Rome. 160
6.3 Cribra orbitalia. 163
6.4 Nitrogen isotope ratios in infant skeletons. 166
TABLES _
2.1 Changes in population parameters during the
demographic transition. page 23
2.2 Life table for Northern Ache females. 29
2.3 Leslie matrix for Northern Ache females. 37
2.4 Comparison of mortality in the Early Period (AD 300 550)
and the Late Period (AD 550 700) at the Tlajinga 33 site at
Teotihuacan, Mexico. 42
3.1 Data recorded on a family reconstitution form (FRF). 51
3.2 Population structure from census data for hunter gatherer
and subsistence farming populations. 59
3.3 Age specific risk of death in hunter gatherer populations. 63
4.1 Factors contributing to differences between the skeletons of
human adult males and females. 94
4.2 Options for the selection of prior probabilities of age in
Bayesian age estimation. 116
4.3 Distribution of femoral head trabecular involution in a
reference series. 117
4.4 Diaphyseal length of femurs in known age individuals. 121
4.5 Posterior probabilities of gestational age given femur length. 122
5.1 Average duration (in years) of the formation of teeth. 139
5.2 Numbers and proportions of old adults in mortality samples. 140
5.3 Proportions of subadults in samples of fossil hominids. 142
TABLES XVil
5.4 Distributions of age at death in Homo heidelbergensis and
Homo neanderthalensis. 143
6.1 Changes in prevalence of selected health conditions at the
transition from foraging to farming. 159
6.2 Modern frequencies of congenital diseases (per thousand live
births) that are diagnosable from skeletal remains. 167
6.3 Proportions of juveniles and of adult females in skeletal
assemblages from European prehistoric conflict sites. 171 |
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id | DE-604.BV022308582 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
index_date | 2024-07-02T16:57:36Z |
indexdate | 2024-10-18T18:06:37Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 0521593670 0521596513 9780521593670 9780521596510 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-015518438 |
oclc_num | 65468207 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-29 DE-12 DE-20 DE-188 DE-19 DE-BY-UBM |
owner_facet | DE-29 DE-12 DE-20 DE-188 DE-19 DE-BY-UBM |
physical | XIX, 235 S. Ill., graph. Darst. |
publishDate | 2006 |
publishDateSearch | 2006 |
publishDateSort | 2006 |
publisher | Cambridge Univ. Press |
record_format | marc |
series2 | Cambridge manuals in archaeology |
spelling | Chamberlain, Andrew T. Verfasser (DE-588)132406284 aut Demography in archaeology Andrew T. Chamberlain 1. publ. Cambridge [u.a.] Cambridge Univ. Press 2006 XIX, 235 S. Ill., graph. Darst. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Cambridge manuals in archaeology Archeologie gtt Demografie gtt Archäologie Demographic archaeology Archäologie (DE-588)4002827-6 gnd rswk-swf Demographie (DE-588)4011412-0 gnd rswk-swf Archäologie (DE-588)4002827-6 s Demographie (DE-588)4011412-0 s DE-604 http://digitool.hbz-nrw.de:1801/webclient/DeliveryManager?pid=1727060&custom_att_2=simple_viewer Demography in archaeology Inhaltsverzeichnis HBZ Datenaustausch application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=015518438&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Chamberlain, Andrew T. Demography in archaeology Archeologie gtt Demografie gtt Archäologie Demographic archaeology Archäologie (DE-588)4002827-6 gnd Demographie (DE-588)4011412-0 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4002827-6 (DE-588)4011412-0 |
title | Demography in archaeology |
title_auth | Demography in archaeology |
title_exact_search | Demography in archaeology |
title_exact_search_txtP | Demography in archaeology |
title_full | Demography in archaeology Andrew T. Chamberlain |
title_fullStr | Demography in archaeology Andrew T. Chamberlain |
title_full_unstemmed | Demography in archaeology Andrew T. Chamberlain |
title_short | Demography in archaeology |
title_sort | demography in archaeology |
topic | Archeologie gtt Demografie gtt Archäologie Demographic archaeology Archäologie (DE-588)4002827-6 gnd Demographie (DE-588)4011412-0 gnd |
topic_facet | Archeologie Demografie Archäologie Demographic archaeology Demographie |
url | http://digitool.hbz-nrw.de:1801/webclient/DeliveryManager?pid=1727060&custom_att_2=simple_viewer http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=015518438&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT chamberlainandrewt demographyinarchaeology |
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Inhaltsverzeichnis