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Design and Construction of an Urban Runoff Research Facility
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Urban Family Reconstitution—A Worked Example.

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    This summary is machine-generated.

    Family reconstitution in urban settings is challenging due to high population mobility. This study adapted a new methodology for Westminster, revealing incomplete burial records and significant residential movement impacting historical population research.

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    Area of Science:

    • Historical demography
    • Urban population studies
    • Family reconstitution methodology

    Background:

    • Family reconstitution is historically difficult in mobile urban populations.
    • A modified methodology by Gill Newton was applied to Westminster's St. Martin in the Fields parish (1752-1812).
    • This period presented challenges due to increasing birth-baptism intervals.

    Observation:

    • The study utilized rich parish records to examine burial and baptismal practices.
    • High frequency of short-range, inter-parochial residential mobility was observed.
    • Data analysis required focusing on families registered at a single address.

    Findings:

    • Birth registration completeness was confirmed using birth interval analysis and twin birth frequencies.
    • A significant undercount of infant and child burials was identified.
    • Missing burials likely resulted from unreported corpse export to other parishes.

    Implications:

    • The study highlights limitations of family reconstitution in highly mobile urban populations.
    • It demonstrates methods for checking and correcting historical demographic data.
    • Findings offer insights into historical burial practices and population mobility in London.