“…Yet, while medical research on OA indicates that obesity (Coggon et al, ; Couchman, ; Felson et al, , ; Fransen et al, ; Mandl, ), vigorous physical activity (Allen et al, ; Cooper, McAlindon, Coggon, Egger, & Dieppe, ; Croft, Cooper, Wickham, & Coggon, ; Dahaghin, Tehrani‐Banihashemi, Faezi, Jamshidi, & Davatchi, ; Felson & Zhang, ; Fransen et al, ; Maetzel, Mäkelä, Hawker, & Bombardier, ), and trauma (Coggon et al, ; Couchman, ; Felson & Zhang, ; Neyret, Donell, DeJour, & DeJour, ; Solomon, ; Zhang, Glynn, & Felson, ) all contribute to the progression of the disease, researchers in multiple fields acknowledge that age is a particularly important systemic risk factor for the development of OA (Calce, Kurki, Weston, & Gould, ; Loeser, ; Mandl, ; Weiss & Jurmain, ). In line with this opinion, biological anthropologists have begun to explore the relevance of synovial joint degeneration for age estimation (Alves‐Cardoso & Assis, ; Brennaman, Love, Bethard, & Pokines, ; Calce, ; Calce, Kurki, Weston, & Gould, ; Winburn, ). Their findings indicate that the relationship between age and OA deserves to be reconsidered for the purposes of skeletal age estimation.…”