Their bones may have been found, but their identities are still missing. Inside an office of the New York City Medical Examiner, dozens of clay faces are perched on shelves. They're the faces of people whose skeletons have been found in New York City but have never been identified. One was in the woods, plants growing through the bones and clothes, a wallet concealing a key clue. Another was hidden in plain sight under the George Washington Bridge. A third was found entombed in a wine cellar in one of Manhattan's poshest neighborhoods. The facial reconstructions represent what the people may have looked like when they were alive. Investigative reporter Kristin Thorne shows us these challenging anthropology cases - the cases represented by the faces in their office. Officials are hoping to solve the mysteries of who these people were, and exactly how they died.
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Unobtrusive Gaze : Where are all the ravenous Pegomastax when you need em?