>>2146309>wouldn't that make it easy for people from both sides to slip back and forth undocumented?>easyThere are significantly easier and smarter ways to slip across the US/Canada border.
There is nothing at all easy about bushwacking 120 miles through alaskan wilderness from one village that's only serviced by bush planes, to another village that's only serviced by bush planes.
>Why is there so little information about this area?Because majority of people are only interested in things that are interesting to other people. Google and Wikipedia don't have information on this because to the majority of people it's just nameless wilderness with no significance. Google has no benefit in providing higher resolution imagery because nobody ever goes there.
You would have better luck using government databases to find more detailed maps of the area.
>Has anyone ever been here and are there other places like this?Yes, people have almost certainly been there for the purpose of geological survey. That specific landform has aerial photography from the 80s available on
nrcan.gc.ca, so there is probably more detailed information somewhere.
>why do we leave such precious land to just sit there uninhabited, let alone unnamed and unmarked, and cut off from humanity.The towns closest to this area are 100mi++++ from the nearest highway. These towns only exist on government or industry dime- they have nothing to offer the rest of the world beyond being a stepping off point for digging things out of the ground or government-funded research expeditions. This land may be pristine natural wilderness to you, but it may be low value from the perspective of resource extraction. If that's the case, we are all better off that it stay that way than populating it for no other reason than because it is there. Leave a place like that for people that want the adventure of being 200 miles from the nearest road.