No.
Every year a few more miles of (previously) unexplored tunnels are found.
Within Carlsbad Caverns itself, about thirty miles of tunnels have been explored. Within the park is Lechuguilla Cave, which is much longer at 138 explored miles.
As of now, not all of the caverns in Carlsbad Caverns National Park have been fully explored. While the main areas are well-documented and accessible to visitors, many remote and less-traveled sections remain largely uncharted. Ongoing research and exploration efforts continue to reveal new passages and features, indicating that there is still much to discover within this extensive cave system.
Since 2004, visitation to Carlsbad Caverns has been about 400,000 per year.
Nature founded Carlsbad Caverns - they are natural features! They have been known to Man since prehistoric times, when they were used as homes, but the exploitation first for mining guano deposits then of Carlsbad Caverns itself as a show-cave started in the 19C. The designation of the caves and their surrounding land as a National Park, to conserve them for everyone, was carried out in several stages starting in 1923.
The highest attendance was 876,500 in 1976. Lately is has been about a 410,000.
I've been there twice because it is breath-takingly beautiful. My guess is that most of the millions of other visitors do for the same reason.
Nature founded Carlsbad Caverns - they are natural features! They have been known to Man since prehistoric times, when they were used as homes, but the exploitation first for mining guano deposits then of Carlsbad Caverns itself as a show-cave started in the 19C. The designation of the caves and their surrounding land as a National Park, to conserve them for everyone, was carried out in several stages starting in 1923.
Who knows? They've not been found yet. I'll invite the local cavers to expand specifically but the joy - and often frustration - of original cave exploration is that you have no real idea until you find it. Yes, you can predict that extensions to a cave may exist, but you cannot be sure till you reach them. There's an old Somerset (S.W. England) cavers' dictum (actually I know who coined it), that, "Caves be where you find 'em!" That's as true in Carlsbad Caverns or the Flint Ridge - Mammoth system as it is on the saying's home territory of the more modest Mendip Hills.
Yes but satellites send pictures of all of the earth so they might not of been explored but they have been discovered
The ocean and the underground. Humans have not completely explored them yet.
No way! There are many parts of the Amazon that have never been seen by humans.
No well at least i don't think I've actually never been to Carlsbad so i wouldn't know.