Facial reconstruction of Jonestown Jane Doe.

State police are hoping bones exhumed from the grave of "Jonestown Jane Doe" Tuesday in Lebanon will lead them to identification of the woman's body found in 1973.

"It was a huge success today," said Trooper David Beohm following the exhumation in Mount Lebanon Cemetery on Maple Street. "They found what they were looking for."

Multiple bones from the grave will be analyzed by a forensic anthropologist from the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, Beohm said. The center is paying for the exhumation and analyzation, he added.

The bones will be examined at the University of North Texas, which could take up to two months, Beohm said. Investigators hope an isotope test could determine what part of the country the woman was from.

"We want to find who this young lady belongs to," Beohm said. There is already a DNA profile of the woman, he added.

In February, state police released a new 3D skull facial reconstruction in the case of the woman's remains that were found by game protectors Oct. 10, 1973 at Route 443 and Tomstown Road in Union Township.

Tips that came in after that and a 3D model of the woman was released in fall of 2015 were followed up, but none have resulted in identification, Beohm said.

Game protectors were investigating a smell suspected from a deer kill by poachers when they found a naked woman's body about 200 yards off the road.

She was 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. She had been there for one to two weeks before the discovery.

They haven't been able to determine how she was killed, due to the time that elapsed between her death and when the body was found.

Likewise, a suspect hasn't been developed. "Once we find out who she is, it will make it a little easier. We can track down friends, associates, family members. That's a big part of this," Beohm said.

There were no other known missing women from Lebanon County from 1973, Beohm said. "I think it's anybody's guess at this point. Any shred of information will certainly help us. We don't have much at this point."

How to help

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.

UPDATE: The time frame for the bone analysis was updated.