Posted Online August 15, 2008.
© 2008 Massachusetts Institute of Technology and The Journal of Interdisciplinary History, Inc.
The Stature and Body Mass of Mexicans in the Nineteenth-Century United States
Scott Alan CarsonScott Alan Carson is Associate Professor of Economics, University of Texas, Permian Basin. He is the author of “The Biological Living Conditions of Nineteenth-Century Chinese Males in America,” Journal of Interdisciplinary History, XXXVII (2006), 201–217; “Indentured Migration to America's Great Basin,” Journal of Interdisciplinary History, XXXIV (2004), 569–594.
Data taken from nineteenth-century American prison records reveal that the statures of Mexicans born in Mexico declined, whereas the statures of Mexicans born in the United States increased. The body mass indexes of both Mexicans born in Mexico and in the United States, however, remained approximately constant throughout the nineteenth century. The evidence suggests that even though the two groups shared a common background, their biological living conditions differed markedly.