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Westerhus : børnenes tænder

Alexandersen, Verner and Iregren, Elisabeth LU (2000) In Hikuin 27. p.203-218
Abstract
In Westerhus on the island of Frösö in Jämtland the childhood was a stressful period with high mortality. In this study the living conditions of the children are discussed on the basis of the age distribution of infants, the prevalence of enamel hypoplasia and the tooth size of deciduous and permanent teeth. Gejvall’s age distribution of infants dying in the neonatal and the postneonatal periods was confirmed using both the atlas and the metric method of age assessment although the peak mortality in the age interval from 3-6 months was not as pronounced as suggested by Gejvall. The mortality in the postneonatal period is ascribed to infectious diseases and early supplement to breast-feeding with complementary foods. Various types of enamel... (More)
In Westerhus on the island of Frösö in Jämtland the childhood was a stressful period with high mortality. In this study the living conditions of the children are discussed on the basis of the age distribution of infants, the prevalence of enamel hypoplasia and the tooth size of deciduous and permanent teeth. Gejvall’s age distribution of infants dying in the neonatal and the postneonatal periods was confirmed using both the atlas and the metric method of age assessment although the peak mortality in the age interval from 3-6 months was not as pronounced as suggested by Gejvall. The mortality in the postneonatal period is ascribed to infectious diseases and early supplement to breast-feeding with complementary foods. Various types of enamel hypoplasia were observed in deciduous teeth. Chronologically the hypoplasias occurred in the intrauterine, the neonatal and the postneonatal periods. Linear enamel hypoplasia in the permanent teeth was also noticed and related to malnutrition and systemic diseases after weaning. The prevalence was higher in the juvenile-adult age group than in the samples of children or mature individuals. Tooth size in the permanent dentition was reduced in comparison with samples of teeth from modern Nordic populations suggesting deficits in physical growth in early childhood. The sex dimorphism of the teeth was utilised to show that children buried North and South of the chapel tended to be distributed like the adult persons with the boys buried South of the chapel and the girls to the North of it. East of the chapel the children in mass graves belonged to both sexes. (Less)
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author
and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
in
Hikuin
volume
27
pages
16 pages
publisher
Forlaget Hikuin
ISSN
0105-8118
language
Danish
LU publication?
yes
additional info
Translated title for this article in english on journal webpage: 'Westerhus: The dentitions of the children'
id
4949768c-9054-4b3a-ae4b-ce6e9c4d8725
alternative location
https://tidsskrift.dk/Hikuin/article/view/111631/160608
date added to LUP
2025-06-19 13:54:23
date last changed
2025-07-23 14:14:41
@article{4949768c-9054-4b3a-ae4b-ce6e9c4d8725,
  abstract     = {{In Westerhus on the island of Frösö in Jämtland the childhood was a stressful period with high mortality. In this study the living conditions of the children are discussed on the basis of the age distribution of infants, the prevalence of enamel hypoplasia and the tooth size of deciduous and permanent teeth. Gejvall’s age distribution of infants dying in the neonatal and the postneonatal periods was confirmed using both the atlas and the metric method of age assessment although the peak mortality in the age interval from 3-6 months was not as pronounced as suggested by Gejvall. The mortality in the postneonatal period is ascribed to infectious diseases and early supplement to breast-feeding with complementary foods. Various types of enamel hypoplasia were observed in deciduous teeth. Chronologically the hypoplasias occurred in the intrauterine, the neonatal and the postneonatal periods. Linear enamel hypoplasia in the permanent teeth was also noticed and related to malnutrition and systemic diseases after weaning. The prevalence was higher in the juvenile-adult age group than in the samples of children or mature individuals. Tooth size in the permanent dentition was reduced in comparison with samples of teeth from modern Nordic populations suggesting deficits in physical growth in early childhood. The sex dimorphism of the teeth was utilised to show that children buried North and South of the chapel tended to be distributed like the adult persons with the boys buried South of the chapel and the girls to the North of it. East of the chapel the children in mass graves belonged to both sexes.}},
  author       = {{Alexandersen, Verner and Iregren, Elisabeth}},
  issn         = {{0105-8118}},
  language     = {{dan}},
  pages        = {{203--218}},
  publisher    = {{Forlaget Hikuin}},
  series       = {{Hikuin}},
  title        = {{Westerhus : børnenes tænder}},
  url          = {{https://tidsskrift.dk/Hikuin/article/view/111631/160608}},
  volume       = {{27}},
  year         = {{2000}},
}