Earth Changes
Reports suggest the attack happened in Southern River, a residential suburb in the city's southeast.
Police were called to Barko's Boarding Kennels on Terrier Place about 1.30pm local time (3.30pm EST) on Tuesday. The woman is believed to be Sue Lopicich, the owner of the boarding kennels.
St John Ambulance officers arrived not long after the attack but the woman died a short time later as a result of life threatening injuries caused by the dog.
Council rangers seized two adult male dogs, a Bull Mastiff and a Staffordshire Bull Terrier.
The terrier was later released after police said the mastiff was responsible for the attack.

Department of Fisheries and Oceans personnel take samples from a dead right whale that washed up on the shores of Cape Ray, on the west coast of Newfoundland.
Four right whale carcasses have now been identified on the west coast of the province, bringing the number of dead right whales in the Gulf of St. Lawrence to 10.
In a release sent Aug. 1, the Department of Fisheries and Oceans says "this is an unprecedented number of deaths and the situation is extremely concerning."
In the release, the department said the carcass was discovered south of the River of Ponds area. Its identity was confirmed after a surveillance flight.
Some of the hail was as large as golf balls and caused considerable damage to garden furniture and cars.
Can you pick out the Pacific Ring of Fire, the Mid-Atlantic Ridge, the collision of India with Eurasia, the building of the Andes? So much information is packed into one animation it's worth discussing what earthquakes tell us about global plate tectonics and mountain building.
The video is both color coded by earthquake depth and sized dependent on the magnitude. Hotter colors represent shallower earthquakes whereas cooler colors represent deeper earthquakes up to 800 km. The circles are sized based on magnitude but then shrink as to not obscure subsequent earthquakes. At the end of the video, there is a compilation of every earthquake in that 15-year time frame, earthquakes with magnitude larger than 6.5 and those with a magnitude larger than 8.
Sources
Liya Chan was playing golf at the Hope Island Golf Course on the Gold Coast in Queensland when she saw a fellow golfer being attacked by a kangaroo and rushed to help him. However, the animal then attacked her, leaving Chan needing six stitches to heal deep lacerations to her head.
"I thought kangaroos are cute," she said. "I didn't realise they were so aggressive."
Chan said she had tried to kick the kangaroo away after it had attacked the other golfer, but she was surprised by how strong the marsupial was and in the end she was left defending herself with her golf club.

Pictured is an elephant attacking an Indian man in a village in West Bengal state. Endangered elephants and tigers are killing one person a day in India as humans put a growing squeeze on their habitat, according to new government figures
But man is in turn killing a leopard a day as the man-animal tussle for space reaches new heights.
India has lost vast swathes of forests to urbanisation in recent decades, forcing animals into human-occupied zones.
According to the environment ministry, 1,144 people were killed in attacks across India in 1,143 days between April 2014 and May this year.
And there is no sign of the toll being cut.
The ministry said 345 tigers and 84 elephants were killed in the same period, mostly in poacher attacks as the mammals are hunted for their tusks

According to the researchers, the scarring stretches a full kilometer up the slopes of the fjord. This can be seen on the right side of the image above
Now, data from a reconnaissance mission at the site has revealed the terrifying waves reached more than 300 feet tall - and, scientists say it was all caused by a massive landslide.
The landslide that gave rise to the disaster plunged into the ocean from roughly 3,300 feet up the Karrat Fjord, spurring a small earthquake and tsunami waves that traveled about the length of a football field each second.
Scientists from the Georgia Institute of Technology say this is a 'particularly unique situation,' as another landslide nearby is active, but has yet to fall.
During the June tsunami, houses were destroyed and four people were washed away.
Agency officials admit that the problem with instruments recording low temperatures likely happened in several locations throughout Australia, but they refuse to admit to manipulating temperature readings. The BOM located missing logs in Goulburn and the Snow Mountains, both of which are in New South Wales.
Meteorologist Lance Pidgeon watched the 13 degrees Fahrenheit Goulburn recording from July 2 disappear from the bureau's website. The temperature readings fluctuated briefly and then disappeared from the government's website.
"The temperature dropped to minus 10 (13 degrees Fahrenheit), stayed there for some time and then it changed to minus 10.4 (14 degrees Fahrenheit) and then it disappeared," Pidgeon said, adding that he notified scientist Jennifer Marohasy about the problem, who then brought the readings to the attention of the bureau.

A Fin whale that grounded itself in Salvage, and later perished on July 30, has brought a number of spectators to the area.
The whale grounded itself on Sunday and later perished.
Gander resident John King made the approximately 100-kilometre trip to the Eastport Peninsula community after hearing about the beaching from a friend.
An avid sea kayaker, King has encountered whales during his travels and he holds a lot of respect for the massive mammals.











Comment: See also: Unusual M4 earthquake sparks tsunami in Greenland, four missing (VIDEO)