EVENT TICKETS
ALL TICKETS >
2025 New Year's Eve
Regular Events
Hurry! Get Your Tickets Now! Countdown has begun!!

2025 Midnight Madness NYE PARTY
Regular Events
Join us for an unforgettable night filled with glitz, glamour, and good vibes! The 2025 Midnight Madness NYE Party promises to be a night to remember with Live Music by DJ Malay

Big Fat New Year Eve 2025
Regular Events
Arizona's Largest & Hottest New Year’s Eve Event: Big Fat Bollywood Bash - Tuesday Dec 31, 2024. Tickets @ early bird pricing on sale now (limited quantity of group discount

Mothers rely on older children to rear younger ones todayNew York, May 10 (AZINS) Debunking earlier theories, anthropologists now suggest that unlike in the past when the entire village came to raise a child, older children are helping rear younger siblings in the family nowadays.

Mothers underwent a remarkable transition from the time when ended support of their young at weaning and received no help from others to the present when mothers often have multiple kids who help rear other children, the study showed.

The team found that early in that transition, it was a mother's older children who helped to raise her younger children and only with more modern life histories did mothers also need the cooperation of other adults.

"This suggests that early human families may have formed around cooperating groups of mothers and children," said University of Utah anthropologist Karen Kramer.

"We simulated an economic problem that would have arisen over the course of human evolution. As mothers became more successful at producing children, they also had more dependents than they could care for on their own," Kramer pointed out.

Before the transition, according to Kramer, mothers likely nursed children until the age of five to six, did not nutritionally support children after weaning and received no help in raising the children.

"Human mothers are interesting. They are unlike mothers of many other species because they feed their children after weaning and others help them raise their children," Kramer noted.

Deep in the past, mothers likely received no help and consequently had much lower rates of fertility and lost many children.

Not only do mothers work hard to care for their young, but so do her older children, grandmothers, fathers and other relatives.

But this was not always the case, the authors concluded.

Kramer's study found that it was a mother's own children who were the most reliable as helpers during transition.

Most earlier hypotheses by other anthropologists about who helped mothers in ancient societies point to other adults.

The findings appeared in the Journal of Human Evolution.