“…Estimating the skeletal age of adults, however, generally demonstrates a progressive decrease in accuracy as chronological age increases. The majority of methods for adult age‐estimation are based on degenerative morphological changes of the skeleton (Brooks & Suchey, 1990; Buckberry & Chamberlain, 2002; Hartnett, 2010; Iscan, Loth, & Wright, 1984, 1985; Lovejoy, Meindl, Pryzbeck, & Mensforth, 1985), which can vary between geographic populations (Atkinson & Tallman, 2019; Jayaraman et al, 2019; Schmitt, Murail, Cunha, & Rouge, 2002), ancestral groups (Go, Tallman, & Kim, 2019; Kim, Algee‐Hewitt, & Konigsberg, 2019; Uys, Bernitz, Pretorius, & Steyn, 2019), and within and between individuals (Britz, Thomas, Clement, & Cooper, 2009; Chan, Crowder, & Rogers, 2007; Crowder, 2005; Crowder & Pfeiffer, 2010; Gocha, 2014; Heinrich, 2015; Pfeiffer, Lazenby, & Chiang, 1995; Stout & Gehlert, 1980; Stout & Stanley, 1991; Tersigni, 2005; Thompson & Galvin, 1983).…”