A forensic artist has given Jonestown's Jane Doe a new face.

Pennsylvania State Police investigators on Tuesday released images from a recently completed 3D skull facial reconstruction as an update in the 1973 murder case. The artist, with The National Center for Missing & Exploited Children, completed the reconstruction to aid investigators trying to bring the suspicious death case to a close.

On Oct. 10, 1973, a pair of Lebanon County deputy game protectors thought they smelled a poached and decaying deer, but, instead, found a naked female body in the area of what the locals called "Five Points" -- a crossing of Moonshine (Route 443), Ridge and Tomstown roads in Union Township.

Without a name, detectives call her Jane Doe.

Police are looking for leads in identifying a white female found dead on October 10, 1973 in Union Township, Lebanon County.

In 1973, a forensic anthropologist sketched what the female may look like, and police unveiled a 3-D bust in October to create a fuller possible picture of the victim.

1973 Jonestown Jane Doe

Police describe the victim as a white female, approximately 16 to 20 years old, between 5-feet-6-inches and 5-feet-8-inches tall and with blonde or light brown hair. The body lay in the woods for one to two weeks before the discovery.

State police at the Jonestown barracks continue to actively ask the public for any information regarding the identity of the female.

Pennsylvania State Police Criminal Investigator Nathan Trate, the lead detective on the case, held a press conference in October to discuss the case. Trate said at the time that he thinks about the case every day.

"I don't lose faith. I can't, not for her. I won't. I won't lose faith for her. Because I think that's what we all stand up here for," he said. "We have to give her a voice, we have to do everything we possibly can to try to figure this thing out."

Tips?

State police ask that anyone who may know the female or circumstances surrounding her death contact Pennsylvania State Police Criminal Investigator Nathan Trate at 717-865-3647 or ntrate@pa.gov.

All calls will remain confidential, and callers can remain anonymous.

Anyone wishing to remain anonymous can also call Pennsylvania crime stoppers at 1-800-4PA-TIPS and reference incident number L02-12591.