You know that's a good question but I don't think so. With all the modern methods of travel and exploration, I don't' think there is...
Have a great day..
2006-06-17 03:23:55
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Yes. I'd say some very remote places probably haven't been walked upon (such as parts of the Sahara Desert). Also, parts of the bottom of the ocean. There are places underwater where the pressure is so great that it'd crush a human to death. Thus, nobody can walk down there.
2006-06-20 10:07:59
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answer #2
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answered by ☼Grace☼ 6
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Yes although it is under many gallons of water, and it is land that has creatures that we have never even seen before. But as for dry land... I really don't believe so. Unless it is newly forming. Then there might be a chance. We can see all dry land from space, and we would have realized if there was a place that we haven't been.
2006-06-17 03:24:45
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answer #3
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answered by Big John 3
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most of it will be under water, but new lava, and cliff ledges are likely not to have our feet trample it.and maybe in some remote regions as well, even if there are some tribal people nearby, as land continually erodes or fresh deposits are left behind virtually every where
even turn over a large rock or boulder and you would likely be the first person to walk on the other side, at the very least, in ages.
2006-06-17 03:30:12
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answer #4
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answered by sspyndel 2
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I think for me, yes. The earth is a big place to discover although some of it is being visited. There are many islands in this world that are yet undiscovered, perhaps there is still a place unknown to us.
2006-06-17 03:29:03
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answer #5
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answered by rye_bugz 2
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Yes, It is a very large planet. Not only that, but when volcano's create new land, nobody has ever stepped on it.
2006-06-17 10:04:57
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answer #6
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answered by fresnoca2002 1
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yes.
the bottom of the oceans floor, tall mountains, places in anartica, and most likely places in the forests as well. There is much to be discovered on Earth, we know only a small portion.
2006-06-17 03:26:39
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answer #7
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answered by tadah.yess 1
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Yes, most of the land beneath the oceans haven't been touched yet.
2006-06-17 03:25:00
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answer #8
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answered by G_Elisabeth 5
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Anywhere beneath the Greenland or Antarctic ice sheets.
2006-06-17 06:54:30
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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yes - in the artic and antartic regions - the deepest parts of the amazon jungle - the floor of the oceans deepest trenches - on the unclimable sides of our tallest mountains - any number of places
2006-06-17 03:28:32
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answer #10
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answered by Norman 7
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