Jobeth,
Here is a study from that same publication that affirms my claim:
A two month change is not really statistically significant and certainly doesn't support the assertion you made. In fact, the study I posted found an even greater change and the authors
still deemed it was not "statistically significant".
This analysis was studying the age of puberty, not the age of menarche. From the paper, "It is important to recognize that there are differences in the pubertal markers "age of onset of secondary sexual characteristics" and "age of menarche." The timing of these events may be regulated differently, making it important to study both. Some data have indicated that the earlier girls begin the onset of secondary sexual characteristics, the longer the time period until menarche is reached."
This study (cited previously) doesn't really pertain as it was a study on Racial Differences and concluded that compared with the recent past (over the last 30+ years) Black American girls reaching menarche earlier than White American girls, has not seen any significant change.
But it does pertain because the relevant data is still there and was analyzed.
Since when is the past thirty years now considered long enough to study evolutionary-type changes?
When I posted that study I was simply responding to your statement, "If the medical textbooks are still saying that average age of menarche is 12.7 years give or take 2 years (11-13), same as they did 50 years ago,
and yet most girls in the 21st century experience menarche at age 9 or 10, then the textbooks are clearly wrong and more study is certainly called for by this glaring and embarrassing discrepancy."
It certainly would be interesting to see a study comparing the age of menarche of modern girls to girls 200+ years ago, but that's probably not ever going to be possible.