MONTEZUMA, Iowa -- Authorities have launched a .gov website to help bring missing Iowa student Mollie Tibbetts home.
By Tuesday, the website had received 1,500 new tips, according to KCRG.
The 20-year-old from Brooklyn, Iowa was last seen while on a run on July 18. She was staying alone with the dogs at the home of her high school sweetheart while he and his brother were out of town.
At a press conference on Monday, Mitch Mortvedt of the Iowa Division of Criminal Investigation urged the public to think back on others' behavior in the days surrounding her disappearance.
"Often there are individuals who are unknowingly associated with the offender of a crime and may be in a position to observe behavioral changes in that person," he said. "They will recognize the change, and may even question them about it, but will not relate the change to that person's involvement in a crime."
RELATED: Updates, timeline of Mollie Tibbetts' disappearance
Mortvedt said investigators are still exploring every potential scenario to try to figure out what happened to Mollie.
"It is possible that Mollie came into contact with someone who has caused her harm," he said. "This person may not necessarily be a member of our community but likely has some familiarity with the area."
Authorities are asking for the public's help acquiring more information about several areas in and around Brooklyn on the night Tibbetts went missing and have created a form for sharing this information on the 'Finding Mollie' website. The website also shows a map of the areas of interest.
Mortvedt highlighted specific behaviors that could be worth sharing a tip with investigators.
Send in any tips by filling out the website form, emailing tips@poweshiekcosheriff.com or calling 800-452-1111 or 515-223-1400. Authorities urged anyone with tips who is not in the Brooklyn, Iowa, area to contact local law enforcement in order to speed up the process.