By satellite no. By foot some places....
Project Confluence- The goal of the project is to visit each of the latitude and longitude integer degree intersections in the world, and to take pictures at each location. The pictures, and stories about the visits, will then be posted here.
See the project confluence in
2006-08-11 14:29:53
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Welll the answer to this question is not Possible , I think. Had there any place knopwn to be unmapped, that would have been mapped .
Else there might be many places unmapped, but also unknown. For the same reason, that had they been known , they wud have been mapped.
There anormous no of such places, especially in mountains & oceans.
2006-08-11 23:36:20
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answer #2
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answered by Ashish B 4
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military intelligence isn't about to let you know the answer to that questions. ;)
actually, nearly all land can be mapped by remote sensing (i.e., satellite), but not every spot is ground checked. Still, you'll have a hard time finding any unmapped areas other that if you're lucky enough to find a new island that just popped up out of the ocean.
2006-08-11 21:28:44
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answer #3
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answered by ctrl-alt-delete 4
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None on land, no. Get a program called "Google Earth", and you can see every square inch of the planet for yourself.
http://earth.google.com/
There are plenty of unmapped places under water, sort of. We know the topology of the ocean floor from radar and sonar, but we can't actually see many of the places down there, nor has anyone visited them. Thus, we're not entirely certain as to what's down there.
2006-08-11 21:19:36
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answer #4
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answered by extton 5
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Some areas of Papua New Guean( Not sure about Spelling), and the other half of that Island (owned by Indonesia, are completley unexplored, and unmapped, if fact they recently stubled upon a jungle valleywith many types of unkown and thought to be extinct species, it is unexplored because of mountainous terrain, and thick Rainforests.
2006-08-12 01:14:54
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answer #5
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answered by 2b2gbi 2
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There are still vast areas of the ocean floor that have not been mapped out IN DETAIL. I also recently read about the discovery of a huge lake in Antarctica, hidden away under the ice, and sealed off from the rest of the world for several million years. There are vast stretches of land covered by ice that the exact nature of is unknown.
2006-08-11 21:22:41
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answer #6
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answered by yellowcab208 4
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Sure, there are caves, ocean beds, but also just because we have them on a map does not mean they are explored. There are some remote areas in south america that are yet to have been visited by resent man... due to cost and toughness to access the reagon.
2006-08-11 21:22:39
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answer #7
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answered by Dport 3
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Other than the islends themselves, there are places in Java, Sumatra and other places in Indonesia that are unchatered WITHIN
2006-08-11 23:04:05
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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i think so.But,even it there aren't any unmapped places,there are many unexplored ones.
2006-08-12 03:40:53
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answer #9
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answered by @neverland 2
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The ocean floor.
2006-08-11 21:20:50
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answer #10
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answered by Victoria R 3
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