Updated ,first published
A Canadian teenager whose body was found surrounded by dingoes on a K’gari beach off Queensland was on a months-long trip along the east coast of Australia.
Piper James, 19, had been travelling with a friend down the Queensland coast from Cairns when she found work at an accommodation provider on K’gari, formerly known as Fraser Island.
Her body was spotted by two men driving along 75 Mile Beach on the east side of the island about 6.30am on Monday near the historic S.S. Maheno shipwreck.
James had told friends she was going for a swim about 5am.
K’gari beaches are not patrolled and have strong ocean currents. The surf was rough on Monday morning, according to the Bureau of Meteorology, with winds reaching 25 knots.
James’ wounds are being investigated, with an autopsy planned for Wednesday to establish whether she drowned or was killed by the dingoes.
“It was obviously a very traumatic and horrific scene,” Inspector Paul Algie told reporters.
“The woman’s body had been touched and interfered with by the dingoes, but we’re not speculating yet as to whether that had anything to do with her cause of death.
“We simply can’t confirm whether this young lady drowned or died as a result of being attacked by dingoes.”
A friend of James told this masthead he met the Canadian and her travelling companion at a backpackers’ hostel in Cairns late last year.
He said he drove the two Canadians to Airlie Beach, stopping along the way, before the pair found work on K’gari.
James’ father Todd said his daughter had planned to earn her pilot’s licence when she returned, and his family would always admire her “strength and determination” to go after her dreams.
“She was glad I was on board for her trip to Australia. She said, ‘because I’m 18, and you can’t stop me’,” he said.
“Mostly, I loved hearing about and seeing the bonds and friendships she was developing as she grew into her beautiful self.”
In an interview with Canadian public broadcaster CBC, he added that his daughter was only five foot and five inches but he believed she would have fought if attacked.
Police told him an open casket was “not going to happen”, and he decided against flying to Australia to bring his daughter home himself.
“It’s not like I’ve got my little girl to go and hold. So I’m holding off going there.”
Australian authorities made contact with James’ family with help from Interpol.
Police said she probably died one of three ways: she drowned and dingoes came across her remains, the dingoes attacked her and killed her, or she was chased into the water by the animals and drowned.
Hervey Bay Mayor George Seymour said the incident was devastating, and part of a trend showing dingoes on the island were becoming increasingly aggressive.
“What we’re seeing over the past few years is a change in the behaviour … we’re seeing more attacks in different ways, like dingoes following people into the water and attacking them.
“That’s something we hadn’t seen before.
“I think there needs to be a review of the approach.”
A person with knowledge of the investigation said James might have suffered defensive wounds, but the cause of her injuries was still being investigated.
A postmortem examination to confirm a cause of death was planned for Wednesday, Seymour said.
James was found north of the Maheno shipwreck, a landmark on the island that ran aground in 1935.
The management of dingoes on K’gari is contentious, with numerous attacks reported on the World Heritage-listed sand island each year.
At least four dingo attacks were reported there in 2025, including one on a nine-year-old boy near Yidney Rocks Beachfront Units and another on a woman who was bitten on the hand at the island’s Winnam camping area when she was approached by five dingoes.
The most prominent fatal attack occurred in April 2001, when nine-year-old Brisbane boy Clinton Gage was fatally mauled by two dingoes while holidaying on the island with his family.
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