Authorities searched for a grizzly bear Monday that attacked and killed a woman over the weekend on a trail near the Montana-Idaho border.

The victim’s body was found Saturday morning by a hiker on the Buttermilk Trail, about 8 miles west of the town of West Yellowstone, the Montana Department of Fish, Wildlife and Parks said in a statement. The woman’s body was a few hundred yards from a trailhead and private campground.

Game wardens and bear specialists, along with staff from other agencies, found that the woman had “wounds consistent with a bear attack,” according to the department.

While authorities did not see any bears, the department said they found tracks from an adult grizzly bear and at least one cub near the site. Morgan Jacobsen with the Montana Department of Fish, Wildlife and Parks said there was no sign the bear tried to eat the victim, who seemed to have been jogging when she was fatally attacked.

“This person was likely out for a morning jog along the trail and that’s when this happened,” Jacobsen told the Associated Press.

The victim’s name has not been released. She was wearing running shoes at the time of the incident and did not have bear spray, an aerosol deterrent that wildlife experts recommend people carry in areas frequented by bears, according to Jacobsen.

Authorities were unable to confirm if the victim was preyed upon or if it was a chance encounter.

West Yellowstone is a vacation town, attracting tourists during the busy summer season and is a gateway to Yellowstone National Park.

The attack occurred near an area with a high concentration of vacation lodges, rental cabins, private residences and campgrounds. The hiking trail is also commonly used for ATVs and other off-road vehicles.