“…The application of this method of age-at-death based on the evaluation of dental eruption is applied in humans only in children or young individuals; this situation must be considered in the case of some animals, for example the elephant, whose molars have an eruption sequence of 30 to 40 years [ 119 ]. Descriptive stages for dental development and eruption in relation to chronological age have been proposed in many animals of the order of carnivorous mammals such as canids (e.g., dog; [ 112 , 120 , 121 ]), felids (e.g., cat; [ 120 ]), and non-human Primates (e.g., lemur, galago, chimpanzee, gorilla, macaque; [ 122 , 123 , 124 , 125 ]), as well as ungulated mammals such as caprines (e.g., sheep, goat; [ 120 , 126 , 127 ]), bovids (e.g., cattle; [ 128 ]), and suids (e.g., pig; [ 120 , 129 ]), among others.…”