According to Mathematica,
$$\displaystyle\lim_{x \rightarrow 0} \frac{(1-\cos x)^2}{\log (1 + \sin^4x)} = \frac{1}{4}$$
For my purposes it is sufficient to know this limit exists and is finite, but I may not use L'Hopital's rule (or anything relying on differentiability). However, I am stuck on how to show this limit holds. I've tried giving an epsilon-delta proof, but it seems needlessly complicated. Ideally I should be able to show the limit exists using only trig rules, algebra, and eventually reducing this out of being an indeterminate form so that I can simply plug in $0$.
However the problem with this is that I can't seem to break the log term. It seems like I would need to factor its argument, but to do so I need to manipulate $1 + \sin^4 x$ so that I can factor it and separate out the terms. But nothing has worked thus far.