JOHNSONS LANDING, B.C. - Rescuers have recovered the body of a third victim who died after her family's home was levelled by a huge landslide in a southeastern British Columbia community.

Coroner Lisa LaPointe said 17-year-old Rachel Webber's body was found around supper time Wednesday near the front of what had been her home in the hamlet of Johnsons Landing.

LaPointe thanked everyone involved in the search, including volunteers and a forensic analyst who pinpointed the best locations to search in a debris field that covers more than 32 hectares.

The bodies of Webber's 64-year-old father Valentine and her 22-year-old sister Diane were found in the same area last week.

The search for Webber resumed Wednesday after rescue crews determined it was safe enough to go into the tiny Kootenay Lake area that was hit by the slide on July 12 after torrential rain led a mountain to give way.

A 64-year-old German woman named Petra Frehse remains missing and the search for her body has ended.

Despite digging a trench that was seven metres long and 10 metres wide, searchers were still not able to find her body, LaPointe said.

“I’m very sorry that we weren’t able to do that for the Frehse family, but where that house was located in the slide field just made it impossible."

Death certificates will be issued for all three members of the Webber family, while an application to presume the death of Frehse will also be submitted, LaPointe said.

The remains of Valentine and Diane Webber have already been released to their family, and Rachel Webber's remains were expected to be released Thursday.

A celebration of life for the four victims will be held on Saturday in Argenta, a hamlet close to Johnsons Landing, said Frances Maika, spokeswoman for the Central Kootenay Regional District.

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  • Geo-seismic crew from the B.C. Ministry of Transportation survey damage to a road Sunday, July 15, 2012 that was torn away by a landslide that buried three homes and has left four people unaccounted for in Johnsons Landing, B.C. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jeff McIntosh

  • An employee of the B.C. Ministry of Transportation surveys a road Sunday, July 15, 2012 that was torn away by a landslide that buried three homes and has left four people unaccounted for in Johnsons Landing, B.C. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jeff McIntosh

  • Lynn Migdal, centre, who now lives in Florida, returns to Kaslo, B.C., Sunday, July 15, 2012, from a tour of the landslide where her missing daughters Rachel and Diana Webber, along with her ex-husband Val Webber are feared in Johnsons Landing, B.C. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jeff McIntosh

  • Valentine Webber's home in Johnson's Landing, B.C. is shown in an undated photo. The house was crushed Thursday in a landslide. THE CANADIAN RESS/ho-Sarah Jenkins

  • Local residents photograph the swath of a landslide that buried three homes and has left four people unaccounted for in Johnsons Landing, B.C., Saturday, July 14, 2012.THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jeff McIntosh

  • A landslide struck Johnsons Landing, a tiny hamlet on the shores of Kootenay Lake roughly 70 kilometres northeast of Nelson, British Columbia, Thursday, July 13, 2012 severely damaging three homes. Four people, including a father, his two daughters and a German tourist, were unaccounted for and feared to be caught in the debris. This photo, taken during a British Columbia Ministry of Transportation and Infrastructure geotechnical assessment shows the impact of the slide. (AP Photo/British Columbia Ministry of Transportation and Infrastructure)

  • The Johnsons landing landslide is shown in this Thursday July 12, 2012 photo provided by Emergency BC. Four people are still unaccounted for nearly 24 hours after a wall of rock, mud and trees cascaded down the side of a mountain above the shores of Kootenay Lake, tearing through the tiny community of Johnsons Landing, about 70 kilometres northeast of Nelson. At least three homes in the southeastern B.C. hamlet are engulfed by the muck, which is unstable and shifting, prompting searchers to call off rescue efforts at least once on Thursday afternoon. Emergency crews met at dawn Friday to consider the most efficient and effective way to search the massive mudslide for possible victims. (AP Photo/Emergency BC via The Canadian Press)

  • The Johnsons landing landslide is shown in this Thursday July 12, 2012 photo provided by Emergency BC. Four people are still unaccounted for nearly 24 hours after a wall of rock, mud and trees cascaded down the side of a mountain above the shores of Kootenay Lake, tearing through the tiny community of Johnsons Landing, about 70 kilometres northeast of Nelson. At least three homes in the southeastern B.C. hamlet are engulfed by the muck, which is unstable and shifting, prompting searchers to call off rescue efforts at least once on Thursday afternoon. Emergency crews met at dawn Friday to consider the most efficient and effective way to search the massive mudslide for possible victims. (AP Photo/Emergency BC via The Canadian Press)

  • The Johnsons landing landslide is shown in this Thursday July 12, 2012 photo provided by Emergency BC. Four people are still unaccounted for nearly 24 hours after a wall of rock, mud and trees cascaded down the side of a mountain above the shores of Kootenay Lake, tearing through the tiny community of Johnsons Landing, about 70 kilometres northeast of Nelson. At least three homes in the southeastern B.C. hamlet are engulfed by the muck, which is unstable and shifting, prompting searchers to call off rescue efforts at least once on Thursday afternoon. Emergency crews met at dawn Friday to consider the most efficient and effective way to search the massive mudslide for possible victims. (AP Photo/Emergency BC via The Canadian Press)

  • The Johnsons landing landslide is shown in this Thursday July 12, 2012 photo provided by Emergency BC. Four people are still unaccounted for nearly 24 hours after a wall of rock, mud and trees cascaded down the side of a mountain above the shores of Kootenay Lake, tearing through the tiny community of Johnsons Landing, about 70 kilometres northeast of Nelson. At least three homes in the southeastern B.C. hamlet are engulfed by the muck, which is unstable and shifting, prompting searchers to call off rescue efforts at least once on Thursday afternoon. Emergency crews met at dawn Friday to consider the most efficient and effective way to search the massive mudslide for possible victims. (AP Photo/Emergency BC via The Canadian Press)