Police on Thursday found the remains of a 12-year-old girl, two days after she was snatched by a crocodile while swimming in a creek in remote northern Australia. The remains were found in the river system near where the girl vanished at the Indigenous community of Palumpa, southwest of the Northern Territory capital Darwin, Police Senior Sgt. Erica Gibson said. Injuries confirmed a crocodile attack, Gibson said. "The recovery has been made. It was particularly gruesome and a sad, devastating outcome," Gibson told reporters.
Efforts were continuing to trap the killer crocodile, she said. Saltwater crocodiles are territorial and the killer is likely to remain in nearby waterways. The girl's disappearance triggered an intense 36-hour land, water, and air search, the AP reports. The crocodile population has exploded across the country's tropical north since they became a protected species under Australian law in 1970s. Because saltwater crocodiles can live up to 70 years and grow throughout their lives—reaching up 23 feet in length—the proportion of large crocodiles is also rising.
Crocodiles are considered a risk in most of the Northern Territory's waterways. "We live in a place where crocodiles occupy our water places," NT Police Minister Brent Potter said Wednesday. "It's just a reminder to stay out of the water as best we can." This is the first fatal crocodile attack in the territory since 2018, the BBC reports, though a 9-year-old was injured in an attack while he was swimming in January. (More Australia stories.)