WA WA - Olympia, WhtFem 20-30, UP8886, cranium & bones in wooded area, sticks & shoelace cross, Oct'81

Yes, her two upper right front teeth had missing enamel on the surface. It may have been a postmortem defect, but they looked smooth, so I depicted them as they were.
Thank you for claification and thank you from the bottom of my heart for giving her a face. Now we need to get her name back.

Enamel defects, if not taphonomic (certain soil conditions can seep into the teeth and stain them) could be the result of many things: substance use, bulimia, malnutrition, bad dental hygiene, hyperfluoridation, genetic conditions, pre caries, mechanical abrasion....
 
Oh thank you, I thought Irin could be a Jewish name (it has a meaning in hebrew), but I am not a specialist, thank you for clarifying. I have also found a couple of missing girls with the last name Miller, but I think the same as Meyer, it can be both German and Ashkenazi. I honestly think it is none of these girls and I suspect her missing person’s report was lost or something like this.
Miller isn’t German or Ashkenazi, but it can be Polish - and some Polish Jews adopted Polish surnames.
 
So, one of the Millers is Jeannette Rose Miller, she dissapeared from Snohomish County, Washington in 1970, she was last seen on Lincoln Bridge in Arlington. I don’t think it is her , taken into the account the circumstances if her disappearance

IMG_5990.jpeg
 
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Miller isn’t German or Ashkenazi, but it can be Polish - and some Polish Jews adopted Polish surnames.
Miller is not originally a polish last name, although yes you can see it among polish Ashkenazi people. Polish last names and other slavic last names dont end with “er”. Also in polish mill is mlyn.
 

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