Friday 6.30pm, October 15: Cleo and her family arrive at the campsite as the sun begins to set. They quickly set up their tent and get settled in, feeding both of the girls. Friday 8pm: Cleo went to bed while her younger sister and parents stayed up for a little while longer. Saturday 1.30am, October 16: Cleo woke up asking for a drink of water. Ellie tended to her and checked on Isla, who was in a crib right next to Cleo's mattress in one room in the tent. Saturday 6am: Ellie woke up to Isla wanting a bottle. She passed the divider that separated the two rooms in the tent and immediately noticed the zipper was almost entirely open. Cleo was gone. Saturday 'mid-morning': Police and emergency services arrive to assist with the search, starting with local Carnarvon officers. Sunday, October 17: Cleo's mum issues a desperate plea on Facebook to find her daughter. Sunday/Monday: Homicide detectives, bush trackers and more volunteers are brought in to assist with the search. Monday, October 18: Police confirm Cleo's grey and red sleeping bag also disappeared. They are yet to comment on whether there were marks that indicate it was dragged from the tent. Police reveal they are not ruling out any possibilities relating to Cleo's disappearance. Tuesday morning, October 19: Search is suspended due to wild weather. Daily Mail Australia confirms the 'interaction' Cleo had with her mother was 'not sinister' and simply the four-year-old asking for a sip of water. Tuesday midday: Search continues again as storm passes. Tuesday 1.30pm: Cleo's mum and stepdad, Jake, speak to the media for the first time since she disappeared, revealing key pieces of evidence, including: - The tent they were staying in was left almost entirely open. Cleo and Isla were in the room nearest to the entrance, which was unzipped when Ellie woke up at 6am. Isla remained in her crib unharmed, but Cleo was gone - Cleo is 'not the sort of child to wander off' and would have woken her parents if she needed anything, like when she woke hours earlier to ask for a sip of water Wednesday, October 20: Police confirm reports a car was heard 'screeching off' from the campsite at about 3am. Assistant Commissioner Darryl Gaunt revealed there are 'between 10 and 20' known sex offenders in the Carnarvon area, but none are suspects into Cleo's disappearance following inquiries. 'We don't have any concerns about that,' he said on 6PR Mornings. 'I know part of the investigative strategies have included reaching and making inquiries into their whereabouts and movements, and this point in time we're very comfortable where we sit with those inquiries.' Investigators confirm Cleo would be too short to open the tent zip by herself, stoking fears she was abducted Thursday 12.30pm local time (3.30pm AEST), October 21: WA Premier Mark McGowan offers $1million reward for any information which leads to Cleo coming home or the arrest and conviction of those responsible for taking her Sunday, October 24: West Australian Police say they have a new lead in the hunt for Cleo Smith after witnesses came forward with what could be a vital sighting of a car in the area near the time screeching tyres were heard at the scene. Police confirm audio of Cleo's voice has been captured on a CCTV camera installed inside a beach shack just 20 metres from where the little girl was staying on the day before she disappeared. Monday, October 25: Bounty hunters begin arriving in Carnarvon to join the search for clues as to Cleo's disappearance in the hope of claiming the $1million reward All rights reserved for this news site (dailymail) and under his responsibility