“…The impact of the agricultural transition on fertility and mortality has been of great interest over recent decades, with research to date indicating major changes in health (both positive and negative) following the adoption and/or intensification of agriculture globally (Armelagos, Goodman, Jacobs, & Kenneth, ; Bellwood & Oxenham, ; Bocquet‐Appel & Naji, ; Buikstra, Konigsberg, & Bullington, ; Cohen & Armelagos ; Eshed, Gopher, Gage, & Hershkovitz, ; Gage & Dewitte, ; Hershkovitz & Gopher, ; Kuijt, ; Kuijt & Goring‐Morris, ; Larsen ; Oxenham, Nguyen, & Nguyen, ; Papathanasiou, ). Also of significant interest at present are the impacts of past climate change on human populations as indicated by shifts in demographic profiles (deMenocal, ; Tipping, Davies, McCulloch, & Tisdall, ; Turney, Baillie, Palmer, & Brown, ; Turney & Brown, ; Van de Noort, ). Notwithstanding, several key issues underpin paleodemography, with the predominant concerns at present being the inaccuracy of age‐at‐death estimation techniques, nonstationarity of populations, and underenumeration of infants (Bocquet‐Appel & Masset, ; Buikstra & Konigsberg, ; Paine & Harpending, ).…”