CALGARY, Canada— Search teams located a second body Friday following a massive rockfall off a hiking trail in Canada’s Banff National Park.

The University of Alberta confirmed one of the two people killed in the rockfall in Banff National Park was retired educator Jutta Hinrichs, who was a leader in the Faculty of Rehabilitation Medicine.

Parks Canada officials say she was 70 and lived in Calgary.

The slide happened Thursday afternoon north of Lake Louise on the Icefields Parkway, about124 milesnorthwest of Calgary. It is also about 85 miles from the site of the Group of Seven summit held in Kananaskis, Alberta, this week.

Three others were taken to the hospital and were reported in stable condition.

Officials said no one else has been reported missing and there are no unidentified vehicles at the trailhead.

The route rus along the edges of Bow Lake and is considered a moderate challenge for hikers and is used by tourists and day-trippers, including families.

Niclas Brundell, a trail guide who lives in nearby Canmore, said he was hiking in the area with his wife Thursday when they both started seeing concerning signs of rocks tumbling and boulders the size of tires starting to fall.

“This was unimaginable to me, that such a big piece of mountain would fall off,” he said.

As rocks started rolling at the top of the waterfall, he said, they didn’t hit anyone, but he and his wife wondered why nobody seemed to be reacting.

“Then all of a sudden, I hear the start of another rockfall, and I turn around, and the whole mountainside is coming off.”