“…It is noteworthy that E. laurillardi and Glyptotherium sp. have body masses over 1,000 Kg (Dantas et al, 2017) and 700 Kg (Dantas et al, 2020), respectively, and the teeth of a putative predator (S. populator, Cerdocyon thous, Panthera onca, or Protocyon troglodytes; see Araújo-Júnior and Porpino, 2011;Araújo-Júnior et al, 2017a) could not have reached the bone of such large-sized preys. This would be possible only if the animals were dead and in a state of necrolysis (see Haynes, 1980Haynes, , 1982Haynes, , 1983Araújo-Júnior et al, 2017a), suggesting that the tooth marks have a postmortem origin.…”