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While it's practically impossible for large apes with sufficient breeding populations ( tens of thousands) to exist in North America while avoiding detection, assuming "nearly every square foot has been set on" is ridiculous. How many times during a hike in the PNW have you ventured off the trail and attempted to traverse the almost impossibly dense brush. You're underestimating the vastness of the forests stretching from California to the Yukon. With that said; there is still no way a bigfoot like creature exists in North America, and every reputable scientist would agree with that.There's been hundreds of years worth of exploration of the United States. Nearly every square foot of it has been set foot on at one point of time or another. There is a reason we don't discover new 100+ lb species anymore, and that's because we've found them all. When is the last time a substantially sized creature was discovered in North America? A long ass time ago.
My folks have a cottage on two acres in central Ontario and 3/4 of the property is impossible to trek through. There's a reason deer, bear and moose follow paths carved into the brush. Even a bigfoot would have created pathways to follow like the other large mammals.