“…The analysis of other dental measurements, such as tissue volumes, has been less common than traditional crown diameters, but dental tissue proportions, tissue volumes, and surface areas have also been identified as being sexually dimorphic (Feeney et al, 2010; García‐Campos, Martinón‐Torres, Martínez de Pinillos, et al, 2018; García‐Campos, Martinón‐Torres, Martín‐Francés, et al, 2018; Harris & Hicks, 1998; Kazzazi & Kranioti, 2017; Saunders, Chan, Kahlon, Kluge, & FitzGerald, 2007; Schwartz & Dean, 2005; Sorenti, Martinón‐Torres, Martín‐Francés, & Perea‐Pérez, 2019; Stroud, Buschang, & Goaz, 1994; Tardivo et al, 2011; Tardivo et al, 2015; Zilberman & Smith, 2001). Despite being used infrequently, the use of dental tissue volumes and surface areas has been recommended for sex determination (García‐Campos, Martinón‐Torres, Martín‐Francés, et al, 2018).…”