On June 17, 2009, someone hiking near the Trans-Canada Highway near Miller Rapids rd. in Kenora, Ontario, Canada discovered a one-person tent. Inside was the body of a woman. It was found that she had died from accidental carbon monoxide poisoning from a hibachi stove inside the tent. She was dressed in hiking like clothes and had equipment for rugged hiking and camping. It's believed she died a day to a week before being discovered.
She's a caucasian woman between 35 to 55-years-old. She's 5'4" and 110 lbs. She has shoulder-length light brown hair. At one point she underwent major reconstruction surgery of her jaw and face likely done in a surgical hospital 20 to 30 years before her death.
The clothing with her was a grey wool sweater, a black long-sleeve shirt, and a grey cotton undershirt with a built-in bra and straps, a black jockey underwear size 5, a pair of dark blue midtown jeans size 6p, grey leggings with lace trim, grey wool socks, thin white cotton socks, black size 5 lace-up Rugged Outback ankle-high shoes. The jewelry was a yellow, blue, and pink three-stringed necklace with a magnetic clip and a hoop earring and brown wire-rim, oval-shaped glasses with a rimless bottom.
Her tent was a one-person Eagle Camp tent. There was a used copy of the book A Long Way Down by Nick Hornby, a bookmark from McNally-Robinson bookstore, $75 in Canadian bills and $2.84 in coins. There was a container of 13 Pfizer pills and a two-pack of back and muscle pain relief medicine,.
Other Images
SOURCES:
DNA Doe Project
Canada's Missing
Kenora Online
Unidentified Wikia
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