“…According to Interpol (2009), fingerprint, comparative dental, and DNA analysis comprise the primary methods of identification [17]. Since teeth do not easily decompose after death, they are a trusted, stand-alone identifier, as described in the Interpol guidelines [2,17,18,28]. Three types of dental identification procedures are considered the gold standard: comparative ante-mortem with post-mortem records of an individual; reconstructive post-mortem dental identification to assess the deceased person's ethnicity, age and gender; and the DNA profiling of oral cavity tissues when no dental records are available for comparison [10,22,28,40,41,42,43,44].…”