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The role of infant life histories in the construction of identities in death: An incremental isotope study of dietary and physiological status among children afforded differential burial.

Elizabeth-Craig AtkinsJacqueline TowersJulia Beaumont
Published in: American journal of physical anthropology (2018)
This study is the first to identify a relationship between the extent of breastfeeding and the provision of child-specific funerary rites. Limited breastfeeding may indicate the mother had died during or soon after birth, or that either mother or child was unable to feed due to illness. Children who were not breastfed will have experienced a significantly higher risk of malnutrition, undernutrition and infection. These sickly and perhaps motherless children received care to nourish them during early life, and were similarly provided with special treatment in death.
Keyphrases
  • young adults
  • early life
  • mental health
  • healthcare
  • preterm infants
  • palliative care
  • pregnant women
  • mass spectrometry
  • quality improvement
  • chronic pain
  • high resolution
  • preterm birth
  • pregnancy outcomes