I don’t know about that. I’m in my mid 30s my great grandpa died a couple years ago in his 90s. You may be overestimating the length of certain generations.
The average age of mothers throughout history tends to be between 25-30. In your case the average is less then 20. Even back in the day, that was not normal. As in first children and even for the time very young parents.
My great grandpa was 63 years older than I was, you might want to try your math again. That’s an average of 21 years. Anything over 30 is considered a “geriatric pregnancy” so I’m gonna need a source on it being 25 to 30 “throughout history”. The numbers I was able to find indicate that 25-30 is the current average only. That the United States has just now crossed the 25 year mark, with average age be becoming 26.5 just within the last few years.
I don’t know about that. I’m in my mid 30s my great grandpa died a couple years ago in his 90s. You may be overestimating the length of certain generations.
The average age of mothers throughout history tends to be between 25-30. In your case the average is less then 20. Even back in the day, that was not normal. As in first children and even for the time very young parents.
My great grandpa was 63 years older than I was, you might want to try your math again. That’s an average of 21 years. Anything over 30 is considered a “geriatric pregnancy” so I’m gonna need a source on it being 25 to 30 “throughout history”. The numbers I was able to find indicate that 25-30 is the current average only. That the United States has just now crossed the 25 year mark, with average age be becoming 26.5 just within the last few years.
Source: https://www.openaccessgovernment.org/average-age-of-conception-throughout-human-history/151423/
Also for today it is well above that in many countries: https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/period-average-age-of-mothers