REVEALED: The many possible escape routes out of the campground where Cleo Smith vanished - as investigator shares why they suspect she was abducted
- Cleo Smith was last seen at the Blowholes campsite early on Saturday in WA
- There are several dirt tracks that trail off from the main road into the campsite
- Cleo could have been taken up to eight hours away by time police were called
- The search for the missing four-year-old is now entering its seventh day
Cleo Smith's suspected abductor could have taken one of more than a dozen different escape routes from the campsite she was last seen at.
The missing four-year-old vanished without a trace from the Blowholes camping ground, near Carnarvon in WA in the early morning of Saturday.
She was last seen by her parents at about 1.30am and when they woke at 6.30am, she along with her adult-sized sleeping bag had gone.
With the search now entering its seventh day, detectives believe the little girl was likely snatched, with fears for her safety getting worse as each hour passes.
The search is expected to be scaled back on Friday, as detectives shift their focus from the theory that she simply wandered off to the possibility that she was taken.

Cleo Smith was last seen at the Blowholes campsite near Carnarvon in WA. Her suspected kidnapper could have taken her down a number of different trails which snake off from the main road

Cleo was last seen by her parents at about 1.30am and when they woke at 6.30am, she along with her adult-sized sleeping bag had gone
While Blowholes Road is the main sealed road out from the camping ground, a map of the area shows there are countless smaller dirt trails which all snake off in multiple directions.
If Cleo was taken north on Gnaraloo Road there are also multiple tracks heading inland from the main road.
The complex intertwining of roads makes it harder for detectives to pin down exactly which direction she may have been taken in the event she was kidnapped.
It's understood from the time her parents woke up that it was at least another three hours before police were called, meaning she could have reached as far as Tom Price just over eight hours north-east of the Blowholes camping ground.
Cleo may also have been driven south with the town of Kalbarri, five hours away, also a possible area she may have passed through, as is the suburb of Meekatharra, 670km south-east.
The Minilya Roadhouse is around 165km north of the campsite and is on the only northbound road away from Blowholes and records every vehicle that passes through.
It's understood police are investigating the CCTV taken from the roadhouse.
A dozen petrol stations told the West Australian they'd been contacted by police to hand over CCTV in relation to Cleo's disappearance, with one as far as 800km south of Blowholes in Lancelin.

Detectives now believe the missing girl was likely abducted as her search enters a seventh day

Cleo's mother Ellie Smith and stepdad Jake Gliddon fronted the media as the agonising search for their daughters goes on
While there are fears the little girl could have been taken interstate, Western Australia's strict Covid-19 policy with police guarding the borders makes it likely she's still within WA.
WA Police Detective Superintendent Rod Wilde said that after a week of scouring the area, the search 'hadn't led us anywhere'.
'So that, gathered with some of the evidence that we have gained from the tent and the surrounds there, has led us to believe that possibly someone else was involved in her disappearance,' he told the Today Show.
'There is a lot of information that has come in. So we are going through that methodically. Look, we are hopeful that will lead us to discovering where she is.'
When speaking about the grief Cleo's parents are feeling, Mr Wilde said it 'doesn't get any worse'.
'We know that. We really feel for the parents,' he said.
A $1million reward is now on offer for anyone who can provide information to police which leads them to finding little Cleo.

Pictured: A timeline of Cleo's holiday with her family, from before she disappeared to the present search
Police have no 'concrete suspects' in the baffling case and say they will not rule anything out.
Alarmingly, there are about 20 known sex offenders living in the surrounding area.
Taskforce RODIA has now been established to help piece together the events leading to and immediately after Cleo's disappearance.
WA Police confirmed that everyone who was at the campsite where the four-year-old disappeared is a potential person of interest.
'Our job is to eliminate everyone that has a trace at the campsite during that time,' Deputy Police Commissioner Col Blanch said.
'There have been hundreds of Crime Stoppers calls, primarily about suspicious persons in the area, and that's what we're responding to.

Cleo's stepdad Jake Gliddon was frantic, according to a camper on the scene who assisted with the search
Commissioner Blanch was asked whether sex offenders identified as living in the area were the subject of investigation.
'Sex offenders would certainly be on the list of persons of interest.'
'The process of any investigation is the process of elimination. We have to eliminate the fact of where that person was at the time of the offence.'
Cleo was last seen when she woke her mum Ellie Smith up about 1.30am to ask for a sip of water. When Ms Smith got up again about 6am to feed Cleo's sister Isla, she realised Cleo and her sleeping bag were gone.
The family had only arrived at the campsite about 6.30pm on Friday for a weekend getaway.
Ms Smith has been visiting the Blowholes campsite since she was a little girl and Cleo was also familiar with the area.