Between 1946 and early 1960s
1964 is considered the last year of the baby boom because it marked the end of a period of increased birth rates that began after World War II. The birth rate started to decline after 1964, leading demographers to mark it as the end of the baby boom generation.
The highest number of births in the baby boomer generation occurred in 1957. This year saw a peak of 4.3 million births in the United States.
1957
Every baby on the earth will simultaneously explode in the year 2046
The "baby boom galaxy" was named the "baby boom galaxy" because of the surprising amount of new stars being "born", created within it. At over 4,000 new stars per year it is the "mother" of all stellar births. In comparison, our Galaxy, the Milky Way, only one to two new stars are formed each year.
in their first or second year
Maybe, maybe not. In genealogy, a generation is not the same as a decade (ten years), and inclusive ages can vary greatly. One generation for example can be your mother and her brother, the next generation would be any children from the mother and from the brother. In more general usage people like to talk about a cohort of all those born during a specified period as being a generation. These tend to be about 10 years in width, but there is no precision in this. So you have the Baby Boom Generation (extending over some 15-20 years) The Beat Generation (who came to adulthood in the 1950s), the Millennials (who were born around the year 2000, plus or minus a few years) and other artificial, groupings used to stereotype people.
The tradition of Baby New Year began in Greece. The tradition began around the year 600 BC, and the baby was used as a symbol of the rebirth of the fertility god Dionysus.
2009
In Australia... Baby Boomers, because they where the generation of repopulation after world war 2
No. The reproductive organs are not mature and hormones are needed to begin the process.
The consumers that were born between 1965 and 1978 are called Generation X/ The were born a year after the baby boomers.