I'm trying to find out what was the Life expectancy of humans during history, but only after factoring *out* infant mortality. Does anyone have a clue where can I find such information ?
Lots of times they do that by saying "Life expectancy at age 5" (e5) or age 10 (e10) or whatever. If you google around a bit, you can find studies detailing life expectancy at those ages. For instance, here is one site that popped up first on a google search using the criteria I just said:
http://www.infopleas...a/A0005140.htmlIt says that for white males, life expectancy at age 10 (well past infant mortality range) has risen from 48.0 remaining years (58.0 total) in 1850 to 66.3 remaining years (76.3 total) in 2004. (the jump is even bigger for white females, from 47.2 remaining years to 71.3 remaining years at age 10 for the same time period)
Of course, you can measure life expectancy at any age you want (remaining life expectancy), but the higher you go, the more data you are factoring out, and so the more flat the line will look. Also, you have to keep in mind that the reporting methods of some countries (especially Communist ones like Cuba) are a lot of the time skewed to make themselves look better than they really are. (infant deaths sometimes aren't reported, etc.)