The body of former Spanish alpine skier Blanca Fernández Ochoa has been found after days of searches involving hundreds of police and volunteers.
Ochoa, 56, was discovered in a mountainous area near Madrid. She had been missing since 23 August.
The authorities are now investigating the cause of her death.
She was the first Spanish woman to win a medal at the Winter Olympics, capturing bronze in France’s Albertville in 1992.
She was well loved in Spain, and her late brother had won Olympic gold in skiing 20 years before her success. When her career came to an end, she took part in reality TV productions such as Celebrity Island and a trampoline-jumping show.
“It is a very sad day for Spanish sports,” said María José Rienda, Spain’s secretary of state for sports. Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez passed on his solidarity and love for her family.
The ex-skier was known to have loved hiking on the mountain, La Peñota, and police believe she had been dead for between seven and 10 days.
A post-mortem examination was being carried out but reports said there were no obvious signs that she had been hurt in a fall.
Tablets that she had been using to treat psychological problems were found in her backpack and forensic scientists were trying to find out if she had ingested any, reports said.
Ochoa’s body was found some 20m (65ft) from a path and some 90 minutes’ walk from where she had parked her car, at the foot of a hiking trail near the village of Cercedilla.
A witness said he had seen her in Cercedilla, where a statue has been set up to her brother, who died of cancer several years ago. “Paquito” Fernández Ochoa was also a skier, who won Spain’s first Winter Olympic gold in 1972.
According to the witness, Blanca Fernández Ochoa told him she was going hiking up the mountain trial even though she did not have a backpack. Spanish media report that before leaving, she kissed her brother’s statue and crossed herself.