Lost on the Appalachian Trail, Geraldine Largay set up a campsite in a small clearing in the woods in Redington Township and died in her sleeping bag inside a zipped tent.

Those details are in a report from the chief medical examiner, released to the Morning Sentinel on Friday under a public records request. Largay, a 66-year-old hiker from Tennessee, disappeared from the trail in late July 2013 and her remains were not discovered until more than two years later, on Oct. 14.

Read the medical examiner's report Related Headlines Interactive map: The search for Geraldine Largay IF YOU GET LOST IN THE WOODS Most tips for hikers lost in the woods stress preparation, with equipment, fitness, food and drink, and letting someone know your itinerary. They also stress not hiking alone. Almost all recommendations start with the Boy Scout tip STOP: Stay calm, Think, Observe, Plan. Other common tips:

• Stay in one place if you know people will be looking for you. “If you’re truly lost, you might actually just wander around in circles, expending energy for nothing. At the same time, you could miss rescuers that are looking for you,” says offthegridnews.com.

• Find a water source. “One of your first priorities should be to stay hydrated. The human body can only survive 3 or 4 days without water,” says the website survivenature.com.

• Find a food source. “Every day that you don’t eat is another day you are consuming your body’s stores and becoming weaker,” says hikingdude.com.

• Build a fire. “Fires are a heat-giving, light-giving and psychological comfort-giving companion to the lost. In an emergency, a big fire may substitute for shelter,” says the website comingbackalive.

• Find or build a shelter before nightfall. “The smaller a shelter, the more easily it is heated by your body. Insulate yourself from the ground as much as possible,” says comingbackalive.

• If you decide to move, travel in one direction during daylight.

The medical examiner had previously ruled Largay’s death accidental — she somehow got off the trail, got lost in the woods and died from a lack of food and water and environmental exposure. The forensic anthropology report from the medical examiner wasn’t completed until Jan. 8. The official cause of death is inanition — exhaustion from lack of food and water — “due to” prolonged environmental exposure.

While it doesn’t shed new light on why Largay got lost or how long she may have been camped out in the woods about a mile from the trail, the medical examiner’s report includes previously undisclosed details about the campsite and Largay’s place in it when she died.

It describes the area as a small clearing on a knoll in a heavily wooded area near a stream, and says Largay set up a sleeping platform made of dirt and pine needles.

She “apparently died during summer while in the sleeping bag, which was then within a closed tent,” the report says. “The body was well protected by the relatively moisture resistant fabric of the sleeping bag and tent in the early weeks after death, limiting the transmission of detectable scent through the air to the searching K-9s.”

The Maine Warden Service has said that Largay’s skeletal remains were found two or three miles from where she was last seen on the trail and were discovered by two surveyors from Prentice and Carlisle Co. who were doing environmental work.

Some of Largay’s remains were taken from the tent by scavenging animals, according to the report, though most of the bones were found together in the sleeping bag. Stain evidence in the tent under where the sleeping bag had been showed she had died in the tent. It was zipped, but had been torn by animals and the sleeping bag had been dragged out after her death, the report said.

Her red jacket, which she was wearing in a photo that was widely circulated after she disappeared, was found nearby.

An examination of the bones showed no signs of trauma and Maine Warden Service Lt. Kevin Adam has said nothing criminal is suspected. The report says the condition of her remains was consistent with someone who had been dead about two years “when compared to similar cases exposed in a Maine woods setting.”

The surveyors were passing through a section of federal land owned by the Navy on their way from a job on private land when they came across the remains, according to the report. Redington Township is roughly between Rangeley and Carrabassett Valley, near the midpoint of Maine’s 282 miles of Appalachian Trail.

Search efforts over the last two years covered a roughly 23-mile area between the lean-to where Largay was last seen and the intersection of the trail and Route 27 in Wyman Township, where she was to meet her husband. The exact point where she left the trail isn’t known.

The warden service could do only three dog searches in the area where where her remains were found because there weren’t enough volunteers physically fit for a ground search on the difficult terrain, Adam said in October.

One of those dog search crews came within 100 yards of the site, Adam said at the time. He did not return a call seeking comment Friday.

CONCENTRATED AREA

The Navy has a Survival, Evasion, Resistance and Escape School connected with the Portsmouth Naval Shipyard on 12,500 acres — 19.5 square miles — in 42-square-mile Redington Township. As a result, special agents with the Naval Criminal Investigative Service got involved when the remains were found.

“Nearly all of the remains were in a rather concentrated area associated with the sleeping bag, which was located within about 19-20 feet from the zipped up tent,” according to the medical examiner’s report.

Largay was last seen alive on July 22, 2013, at the Poplar Ridge lean-to. She was less than 200 miles from completing the 900-plus-mile half of the trail that she had begun in West Virginia months earlier.

There was torrential the day and night after Largay was last seen, and concerns at the time were that she got turned around on the trail, or had difficulty at the Carrabassett River crossing beyond where she was last seen.

She was scheduled to meet her husband, George Largay, on July 23 in Wyman Township to pick up food and supplies, but she never arrived. She was reported missing July 24, spurring an extensive search and an enduring mystery.

Along with clothing and other belongings, Largay’s cellphone was discovered among her possessions in October, and examination by the Maine State Police Computer Crime Lab showed Largay had reached Orbeton Stream on July 22 and a discontinued railroad bed crossing in late morning.

Shortly after reaching the intersection, she continued north on the trail, but left it at some point and got lost. Orbeton Stream is about a third of the way between the Poplar Ridge lean-to, where Largay was last seen, and the Spaulding Mountain lean-to.

Her disappearance puzzled searchers and attracted national media attention.

Warden service officials in October called it “one of Maine’s most unique and challenging search-and-rescue incidents.”

The search for Largay was scaled back in August 2013, but periodic searches continued in the area.

According to the medical examiner’s report, Largay’s wooded campsite area was a mixture of hardwood and evergreen, with a tree canopy covering about 75 percent of the campsite from above.

“Visibility of the campsite from the surrounding woods or from the air above would be very limited,” the report says.

After the remains were discovered, Largay’s family said in the release that “these findings are conclusive in that no foul play was involved and that Gerry simply made a wrong turn shortly after crossing Orbeton Stream. Now that we know her death was an accident, we again ask all media for the respect of our privacy as we continue our grieving process with this new chapter of closure.”

David Fox, a friend of the family who has acted as a spokesman, did not return calls for comment Friday.

George Largay has previously told The Tennessean newspaper that his wife “loved camping. She loved outdoors.”

“The ultimate hike for someone who really loves hiking as she does is the Appalachian Trail,” he said.

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