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New life has exploded in a place once thought to be silent, a place where the echoes of loss had long filled the air. At Mt Gibson Wildlife Sanctuary, a land once marked by the shadows of extinction, tiny, spike-furred hunters have defied the odds and emerged from the brink of oblivion. These resilient creatures, the western quolls, had been written off by many, considered lost forever in the vast tapestry of Australia’s environmental decline. But against all expectations, these tenacious beings have reappeared, clawing their way back into a world that had all but forgotten them. Their emergence has stunned scientists, who watch in awe as this species, once almost buried by history, returns with claws bared and eyes blazing. It’s a moment of triumph, but as the first fragile litter stumbles into a world still filled with the traps, poisons, and prowling invaders of modern life, one question looms larger than all others: is this a miracle, or is it merely the beginning of a long, grueling fight that may still end in defeat?
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