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British ColumbiaINTERACTIVE

B.C. Coroners Service hopes new map will bring fresh tips on 200 unsolved cases

The B.C. Coroners Service has launched a new interactive map marking locations where unidentified remains have been discovered with the hope of generating fresh tipsthat could help determinewho they belong to and how they died.

Interactive map shows locations where unidentified remains were found

Replicas of two small skeletons, children's clothes, a lunch box, a leather aviator's cap, a woman's fur coat, a woman's shoe and a hatchet that were found in the Babes in the Woods case in 1953 are seen at the Vancouver Police Museum. (CBC Archives)

The B.C. Coroners Service has launched a new interactive map marking locations where unidentified remains have been discovered with the hope of generating tips that could help determine who they belong to and how they died.

The remains of close to 200 peoplehave been found across B.C. over the past 60 years,but have never been identified. They include:

  • A man in a park wearing a luxurySwiss watch with grass cuttings on his clothes, found in the spring of 1971.
  • A manwearing a years-old concert T-shirtfrom aRomanticstour, found in the winter of 1994.
  • Twin girls, less than a year old, found along the lakeshore at a provincial parkin thefall of 1994.

"If we can embrace technology and make things better for a family that's got no answers on something, all the better," said Andy Watson, spokesperson for the coroners service,which investigatesunnatural, sudden and unexpected, unexplained or unattended deaths in the province.

"That's a big piece of what we're able to do."

Three of the sketches included on the B.C. Coroners Service's map of locations where unidentified human remains were found in the province. The woman at left was found near Mission on Feb. 15, 1995. The man in the centre was found near North Bend on Dec. 22, 1989. The woman on the right was found near Kamloops on Sept. 24, 1996. (B.C. Coroners Service)

It took years to build the map and months to test for glitches.Blue points the vast majority are for men, while red are for women and green denotes undetermined gender.

The locations range from Haida Gwaii east to Kimberley, and south from the Juan de Fuca Strait north to the backwoods off Highway 16 also known as the Highway of Tears.

Included in each marker on the map is as much detailabout the personas possible: race, approximate age, hair colour, surgeries they may have had, number of fillings in theirteeth and clothes they were wearing when they were found, rightdown to the brand name. Anything, Watson said, that could jog a memory.

Human remains can be anything from a single, delicate bone fragment to a fullyintact body. Many of the cases on the map are decades old, back when there were fewer options for post-mortem testing that could identify someone though Watson said there are scores of reasons remains can go unidentified for a long time.

"There's more tools available to us now, but there can certainly be all different factors that play into why identifying somebody can be difficult, particularly if somebody is found remotely or with an unwitnessed death," he said.

Most of the remains belong to men, and many are clustered in the province's highly populated Lower Mainland. Many also line the province's arterial highwaysas well as the shoreline, where tides have washed them up.

Investigators at a False Creek marina examine remains found in a shoe on Aug. 30, 2011. The remains have never been identified. (Emily Elias/CBC)

Fivemarkers are for single feet washed up on B.C.'s shoresbetween 1980 and 2018: three in Metro Vancouver and twooff the west coast of Vancouver Island.

The oldest instance of unsolved remains is the infamous Babes in the Woods child murder case.

On Jan. 14, 1953, aparks worker clearing brush to make way for new treesoff the Stanley Park causeway in Vancouver foundthe skulls of two young boys and a hatchetburied in the dirt. It was determined that the boys hadbeen dead for about six years.

The boys shared a father and werebelieved to have been between six and 10 years old when they died, but have never been identified.

Watson said any tip, even something slight, could help move an investigation forward.

"Something that may seem small and insignificant to one person could actually be the missing piece," he said.

Find the map below: