While the recent discoveries of two unidentified baby girls (one in southern Australia, one in Massachusetts) have been all over the media, not all cases are so lucky. Sadly, there are too many cases that are similar to those where a baby girl has gone years without anyone knowing her name. Take a look at the baby girls below. You might be the one to give a baby girl back her name.

A trucker driving through Millwood, Ware County, Georgia, had stopped on the side of the road and kicked a nearby television console. To his surprise, it broke open and revealed a black metal suitcase. He opened the suitcase and to his horror found the body of a baby girl encased in cement. A post-mortem revealed she was a black female, two to three years old, and had been deceased for about two or three months. She had black hair, which was tied with brightly colored bows, and wore pajama pants and a white pullover shirt with a red pony on it. A printable poster about this baby girl’s case is here. If this girl sounds familiar to you, contact the Ware County Coroner’s Office at 912-283-3030 about case number U338979918.

Truckers were also involved in the discovery of a baby girl in Dog River beneath the westbound lane of I-10 in Pascagoula. CB radio messages the night of December 4, 1982, reported a young woman walking along I-10 carrying a child and not allowing anyone to help her. On December 5, a trucker called the police to report seeing the body of a woman in the river. The woman’s body was never found, but the body of a baby girl was found in the water. She was a white female, estimated to be 1- to 2-years-old, with long strawberry blond hair and either blue or brown eyes. She was wearing a Cradle Togs’ pink and white dress, which buttoned in the back. A printable poster about this baby girl’s case is here. If this girl sounds familiar to you, contact the Jackson County Medical Examiner’s Office at 228-769-3197 about case number 82-21094.

While searching for scrap cans and metal in Clewiston, Florida, a man found the body of a baby girl in a wooded area on the canal bank approximately 15 feet west of Corkscrew Road, and approximately 100 yards west of US 27. The baby was three to five weeks old, either white or hispanic, with dark brown or black hair. Her mandible and maxilla were fractured. She was wrapped in a red / white / gray / blue Indian or Mexican style blanket, four green towels, and a black and white woman’s sweater. A printable poster about this baby girl’s case is here. If this girl sounds familiar to you, contact the District 20 Medical Examiner’s Office at 561-688-4575 about case number 1996-00508.

The body of a newborn baby girl was found March 26, 2007, at the Treasure Island Marina in Welch, Minnesota. She had straight, dark hair, was full term or near full term, and was probably Native American. She was believed to be born alive and to have died a few weeks before she was discovered. If this girl sounds familiar to you, contact the Goodhue County Sheriff’s Office at 651-385-3155 about case number GC07-39.

Can You Give Names Back To Any Of These Unidentified Baby Girls? Facial reconstructions of an unidentified baby girl found in Waycross, Georgia in 1988. (Photos via NCMEC) Facial reconstructions of an unidentified baby girl found in Waycross, Georgia in 1988. (Photos via NCMEC)

Facial reconstructions of an unidentified baby girl found in Escatawpa, Mississippi in 1982. (Photos via NCMEC) Facial reconstructions of an unidentified baby girl found in Escatawpa, Mississippi in 1982. (Photos via NCMEC)

Facial reconstruction and picture of blanket baby was wrapped in of an unidentified baby girl found in Clewiston, Florida in 1996. (Photos via NCMEC/Doe Network) Facial reconstruction and picture of blanket baby was wrapped in of an unidentified baby girl found in Clewiston, Florida in 1996. (Photos via NCMEC/Doe Network)

Facial reconstruction of an unidentified baby girl found in Red Wing, Minnesota in 2007. (Photo via Namus) Facial reconstruction of an unidentified baby girl found in Red Wing, Minnesota in 2007. (Photo via Namus)

If you know the name of any baby girl featured here or have any information about those cases but wish to remain anonymous, contact the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children at 1-800-THE-LOST.

[Images via NCMEC / Namus / Doe Network]