It is always a tragedy when someone passes away, but during the hardest times, families and friends can get together to remember and pay tribute to their loved ones.

Sadly, some people who do not even get that small comfort. In some cases when a person dies, no one is ever able to identify them.

The UK Missing Persons Unit has published a list of the people who have been found dead but have not been named due to missing information.

Each case file has information as to where and how the person died and their description of how they look and what they were wearing.

Iver Man:

Bucks Free Press:

On May 30, 1973, a man with a moustache dressed smartly in a suit walked across Langley Park Road in Iver and was hit by a lorry. He was rushed to Wexham Park Hospital, where he tragically died.

Nearly 50 years later, the identity of the man remains a mystery, with no one who knew him coming forward.

The man was estimated to be aged between 30 and 45 and was 6ft tall, of thin build. He had black, wavy hair, brown eyes and a moustache.

He was smartly dressed when he died, wearing a Green jacket and trousers with the Lovat Check pattern made by Dunn+Co. He wore a white shirt with a mauve pattern on and a mauve tie with a pattern matching the shirt around his neck.

On his feet, he wore grey socks and black size 11 shoes.

The man also wore some discreet jewellery – a silver crucifix on a chain and a Lammar wristlet watch.

If you think you know who this man is, click here

Beaconsfield ‘remains’

The skeletal remains of an unknown male were discovered in an unused wooden shed on the Portman Burley Estate in Beaconsfield on August 22, 2007.

Investigators estimate that the male had been dead for between seven months and two years before his remains were discovered.

The male was thought to have been aged around 20 to 30 years old and between 5ft 6ins and 5ft 8ins in height. His eye colour is unknown.

The clothing worn by the male when he was discovered included a pair of blue and white trainers with the branding ‘McDaniel by Xanthus’. He was also wearing light blue socks.

The male was wearing a blue ‘US Sportswear’ fleece, a black bomber jacket with an orange lining, a beige jumper adorned with the slogan ‘It Is Always Over The Top’ on the chest area, and a pale striped t-shirt.

A grey rucksack and a clothes peg wrapped in tissue paper were also found with the remains.

If you know who this man is, click here