With mortAAR
you can calculate a life
table based on archaeological demographic data. You just need
the number of people of a certain age, but you can also use single
individual data. mortAAR
allows to separate the data
according to sex/location/epoch or any other grouping variable.
What is a life table [aka discrete time survival analysis]? According to Chamberlain it is a
“(…) mathematical device for representing the mortality experience of a population and for exploring the effects on survivorship of age-specific probabilities of death. One reason why life tables have been ubiquitous in demography is that mortality cannot easily be modelled as a single equation or continuous function of age.”
To our knowledge as of writing, a simple to use and easily accessible
tool to calculate and create archaeological life tables has been
lacking. That is why we sat down and put mortAAR
for R
together. We hope it will be of use for archaeologists world-wide.
In our view, mortAAR
shines in the following areas:
For further information, please have a look at the Vignettes – Basic usage, Extended discussion, Life table correction and Reproduction – and the Manual.
mortAAR
is available on CRAN and can be
installed through install.packages("mortAAR")
. You can also
install the development version with:
if(!require('remotes')) install.packages('remotes')
remotes::install_github('ISAAKiel/mortAAR', build_vignettes = TRUE)
mortAAR
is released under the GNU General Public
Licence, version 3. Comments and feedback are welcome, as are code
contributions.