In the present study, teeth with restorations, caries, pathologies (including periapical lesions), and severe attrition were excluded. Furthermore, endodontically treated teeth, or teeth with orthodontic introductionThe discovery of a nonidentified body raises questions to be answered by the coroner, among them, the age of the dead body. Research is then undertaken to determine the profile (ethnicity, sex, and age) of the victim. In age assessment, bone and dental methods are most widely used. The role of the dental organ in this estimation process is often decisive. Because of its biological behavior and morphological features, the tooth represents a medicolegal tool of extreme importance in the assessment of age. 1 This last one is based on the study of the root transparency, the racemization of the amino acids, the radiological and genetic methods. The study of pulp aging as an indicator of age is based on knowledge of the repairing potential of the pulp, whose production of physiological secondary restorative dentin continues in adult teeth.In 1925, Bodecker showed that AC was correlated with the affixing of secondary dentin. 2 Ikeda et al., in 1985, developed the coronal pulp index (TCI) for age estimation by taking X-rays of extracted teeth. 3 Later, Drusini, in 1993, applied the calculation of TCI on radiographs of living people. 4 According to Drusini et al., this affixing of secondary dentin remains a morphological indicator and a significant biomarker of dental age, as it is not an alteration caused by dental erosion. 5 The correlation between pulp reduction and dental age has been the subject of many investigations among Caucasian, 6 Indian, 7 and Arab populations. 8 To date, no studies have tested its applicability in West African melanoderm subjects. This study was aimed to test the validity of the coronal pulp index on a sample of Senegalese melanoderm people.