Introduction to the handbook

By: , and 
Edited by: Steven C. AmstrupTrent L. McDonald, and Bryan F.J. Manly

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Abstract

In September of 1802, Pierre Simon Laplace (1749–1827) used a capture– recapture type of approach to estimate the size of the human population of France (Cochran 1978; Stigler 1986). At that time, live births were recorded for all of France on an annual basis. In the year prior to September 1802, Laplace estimated the number of such births to be approximately X = 1,000,000. These newly born individuals constituted a marked population. Laplace then obtained census and live birth data from several communities “with zealous and intelligent mayors” across all of France. Recognizing some variation in annual birth rates, Laplace summed the number of births reported in these sample communities for the three years leading up to the time of his estimate, and divided by three to determine that there were x = 71,866 births per year (marked individuals) in those communities.  The ratio of these marked individuals to the total number of individuals in the sampled communities, y = 2,037,615, was then the estimate

= 71,866/2,037,615 = 0.0353

of the proportion of the total population in France that was newly born. On this basis, the one million marked individuals in the whole of France is related to the total population N as 

Np ≈ 1,000,000

so that

N ≈ 1,000,000/0.0353 =28,328,612

This estimation procedure is equivalent to the Lincoln-Peterson capture-recapture estimator described in chapter 2.

Publication type Book chapter
Publication Subtype Book Chapter
Title Introduction to the handbook
Chapter 1
ISBN 9781400837717
Year Published 2005
Language English
Publisher Princeton University Press
Publisher location Princeton, NJ
Contributing office(s) Alaska Science Center
Description 21 p.
Larger Work Type Book
Larger Work Subtype Handbook
Larger Work Title Handbook of capture-recapture analysis
First page 1
Last page 21
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