List of uninhabited regions facts for kids
An uninhabited region is a place where no people live. By 'uninhabited' is meant "non-one lives there permanently". The difficult case is Antarctica, where there are permanent stations, but their staff do not stay permanently. In other places there may be visitors, and sometimes research teams visit for longer periods.
List
- Antarctica
- Antipodes Islands
- Ashmore and Cartier Islands
- Bajo Nuevo Bank
- Baker Island
- Balleny Islands
- Much of interior Nunavut
- Big Major Cay
- Bouvet Island
- Caroline Island
- Clipperton Island
- Devon Island
- Elephant Island
- Elobey Chico
- Ernst Thälmann Island
- Much of Inland Greenland
- Gough Island
- Hans Island
- Harmil
- Hashima
- Hatutu
- Heard Island and McDonald Islands
- Howland Island
- Highlands of Iceland
- Jaco Island
- Jan Mayen
- Jarvis Island
- Jong Batu
- Kahoolawe Island
- Kerguelen Islands
- Kingman Reef
- Mborokua
- Minquiers and Ecréhous
- Melville Island
- Monomoy Island
- Prince Edward Islands
- Navassa Island
- Novaya Zemlya
- Nomans Land
- Much of Northern Ontario
- Paracel Islands
- Palmyra Atoll
- Redonda
- Round Island
- South Orkney Islands
- Spratly Islands
- Stirling Island
- Much of Northern Siberia
- St Kilda
- Tetepare Island
- Tinakula
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List of uninhabited regions Facts for Kids. Kiddle Encyclopedia.