Every face tells a story'
from: 'Every face tells a story' - Pique Newsmagazine
Inside the 33-year effort to identify mystery remains found on Whistler Mountain
Apr 10, 2020 1:00 AM By: Brandon Barrett
Every face tells a story' - Inside the 33-year effort to identify mystery remains found on Whistler Mountain. Story By Brandon Barrett. Illustration by Baz Corolan
IT IS A BALMY DAY in August 1987, all the excuse Dave Williamson and Rod MacLeod need to get out of the office for a while and escape the oppressive heat. Working as planners for what was then the Whistler Mountain Ski Corporation, Williamson and MacLeod are surveying a potential lift line near mid-station, hanging flags and doing some fall-line analysis as they walk through the lush, moss-laden understory of an old hemlock forest.
As they venture downslope, making idle chatter, Williamson spots something in the distance: a gleam of white peeking up from out of the verdant landscape.
"Hey, look, there's a skull," he says to his supervisor, half-jokingly.
"No way, it can't be," MacLeod replies.
They continue on to get a closer look when, some 15 metres away, a realization dawns on Williamson: That really is a skull.
The pair then runs through the most likely scenarios, as we tend to do when confronted with such an improbable reality. It's a rock, MacLeod suggests. Or a bear skull.
"'Well, if it's a bear, it's been to the dentist, because I can see its fillings," says Williamson, now peering intently into the skull's jaw, which sits in vivid contrast to the evergreen bed of moss beneath it.
"This thing has got a bullet hole in the side of it," he observes.
"No, no, that's an ear hole," retorts a still-skeptical MacLeod.
"Well, it has got two ears on the side of its head then," says Williamson, the last shred of doubt evaporating in his mind.
"Holy moly, we just found something here."
Mystery grips a sleepy ski town
<modsnip: Snipped to comply with 10% copyright law>
Photo courtesy of the RCMP
If you have any information on this case, please contact the Whistler RCMP at 604-932-3044 or Sea to Sky Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-8477 to remain anonymous.
'Is there someone out there still hoping he's around?'
from: 'Every face tells a story' - Pique Newsmagazine
Inside the 33-year effort to identify mystery remains found on Whistler Mountain
Apr 10, 2020 1:00 AM By: Brandon Barrett

Every face tells a story' - Inside the 33-year effort to identify mystery remains found on Whistler Mountain. Story By Brandon Barrett. Illustration by Baz Corolan
IT IS A BALMY DAY in August 1987, all the excuse Dave Williamson and Rod MacLeod need to get out of the office for a while and escape the oppressive heat. Working as planners for what was then the Whistler Mountain Ski Corporation, Williamson and MacLeod are surveying a potential lift line near mid-station, hanging flags and doing some fall-line analysis as they walk through the lush, moss-laden understory of an old hemlock forest.
As they venture downslope, making idle chatter, Williamson spots something in the distance: a gleam of white peeking up from out of the verdant landscape.
"Hey, look, there's a skull," he says to his supervisor, half-jokingly.
"No way, it can't be," MacLeod replies.
They continue on to get a closer look when, some 15 metres away, a realization dawns on Williamson: That really is a skull.
The pair then runs through the most likely scenarios, as we tend to do when confronted with such an improbable reality. It's a rock, MacLeod suggests. Or a bear skull.
"'Well, if it's a bear, it's been to the dentist, because I can see its fillings," says Williamson, now peering intently into the skull's jaw, which sits in vivid contrast to the evergreen bed of moss beneath it.
"This thing has got a bullet hole in the side of it," he observes.
"No, no, that's an ear hole," retorts a still-skeptical MacLeod.
"Well, it has got two ears on the side of its head then," says Williamson, the last shred of doubt evaporating in his mind.
"Holy moly, we just found something here."
Mystery grips a sleepy ski town
<modsnip: Snipped to comply with 10% copyright law>

Photo courtesy of the RCMP
If you have any information on this case, please contact the Whistler RCMP at 604-932-3044 or Sea to Sky Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-8477 to remain anonymous.
'Is there someone out there still hoping he's around?'
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