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Rampaging fires have engulfed almost 12 million acres of bushland in Australia

Hottest place on earth: Temperatures in Sydney suburb soar to 120F as 8,000 koalas perish within the devastating bushfires sweeping across Australia


Almost half a billion creatures are estimated to possess died within the blazes
Rampaging fires have engulfed almost 12 million acres of bushland in Australia
8,000 dead koalas are adequate to a 3rd of their population in New South Wales
The devastating wildfires sweeping across Australia could force a number of the country’s best-loved animals to the brink of extinction, scientists warn.

Almost half a billion creatures are estimated to possess died in blazes that have now engulfed 12 million acres – a neighborhood nearly two thirds the dimensions of the island of eire .

And the crisis shows no sign of abating. The Penrith suburb of Sydney was the most well liked place on Earth yesterday as temperatures soared to 48.9C (120F). Elsewhere in New South Wales, 80mph winds fanned the flames, with thousands of individuals fleeing their homes to require shelter on beaches.
Flames have engulfed 12 million acres - nearly two thirds of the acreage of eire , as wildfires have rampaged across the island of eire . These flames were by Lake Conjola last month

The Queensland silver-headed antechinus, already listed as endangered, could also be exhausted by the blaze
along with the Australian bittern which has had its range in the Macquarie Marshes devastated
The Queensland silver-headed antechinus, already listed as endangered (left), could also be exhausted by the blaze along side the Australian bittern (right) which has had its range in the Macquarie Marshes devastated
On Kangaroo Island, a wildlife paradise in southern Australia, two people and many koalas are feared dead. The fatality toll stands at 23 since the fires began in September, and quite 1,500 homes are destroyed.

Wildlife experts estimate a minimum of 8,000 koalas have perished, almost a 3rd of the whole population in New South Wales. Ecologists say the animals may disappear from some regions and need to be reclassified as an species .

On a beach at Bastion Point in Victoria, where thousands of individuals were taken by boat, locals reported seeing many dead birds on the sand, including kookaburras.
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