Category: Island Life

Venezuela Earthquake Shakes Trinidad, Southern Caribbean

 

By the Caribbean Journal staff

A 7.3-magnitude earthquake hit Venezuela on Tuesday, rocking northern Venezuela and causing strong tremors across much of the southern Caribbean.

The quake, which struck at 5:31 PM local time, was felt most strongly in neighboring Trinidad and Tobago, while reports of shaking were reported in Grenada, Barbados, St Vincent and the Grenadines, Saint Lucia, Martinique, Montserrat, Curacao and Aruba.

The quake, which lasted for about a minute, stunned Trinidad, as cans fell off supermarket shelves, walls cracked in residential and commercial buildings and there were reports of power outages across the island and some downed traffic lights.

Reports of earthquake in Trinidad and other parts of the EC pic.twitter.com/Jr13YuEobq

— Alton Davis (@AltonPuzzle26) August 21, 2018

According to Minister of National Security Stuart Young, the country’s electrical utility was already addressing areas without electricity.

The damage also included Trinidad’s Centipede Island, where a corner of a hill reportedly crumbled into the sea.

There were not yet any reports of injuries in Trinidad and Tobago, however.

The University of the West Indies Seismic Research Centre reported the quake as 6.9 on the Richter scale, at a depth of 86 kilometers.

A map of shaking report points.

It was the most powerful earthquake in the Caribbean since January, when a 7.6-magnitude quake struck in the middle of the Western Caribbean, close to the Cayman Islands.

As a point of comparison, the 2010 earthquake in Haiti was a 7.0-magnitude on the Richter scale.

The Caribbean is a seismically active region; the UWI Seismic Research Centre has long warned the region to improve its resilience in that regard.

 

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Eleven months after Hurricane Maria, Puerto Rican team making a Little League World Seris run

… the Puerto Rico dugout.
An emphatic roar filled Volunteer Stadium, as miniature Puerto Rican flags waved in tandem with fatheads of each player. The Puerto Rico … for my guys and for Puerto Rico, and my city,” Rosario …

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Grenadian PM’s alliance with Russians raises questions

By Youri Kemp Caribbean News Now associate editor youri@caribbeannewsnow.com ST GEORGE’S, Grenada — A strange and oddly shaped alliance between Grenada’s prime minister, Dr Keith Mitchell, and Russian technology magnate and ambassador of Grenada to Russia, Oleg Firer, are raising eyebrows in the tiny island nation of Grenada and may expand to other island neighbours […]

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Hurricane Irma sends decade-old US-Antigua dispute back into the spotlight

By Andrew Lumsden Research Fellow at the Council on Hemispheric Affairs WASHINGTON, USA — Last month, Sir Ronald Sanders, Antigua and Barbuda’s ambassador to the United States, sought support in a speech before a meeting of the World Trade Organization’s (WTO) Dispute Settlement Body (DSB) in Geneva, Switzerland. He lamented that his country is “losing […]

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A New Hiking Trail in Saba

 

By the Caribbean Journal staff

Saba may be tiny, but the Dutch Caribbean island is long on adventure.

Now, Saba has added a new hiking trail: the Elfin Trail, which follows the historic paths used by earlier generations who farmed the slopes on the mountain.

It’s the most diverse hiking trail on an island filled with them, taking in three ecosystems: woodlands, rainforest and cloud forest.

That’s along with impressive vegetation from the volcanic soil, from wild orchids to ferns and begonias.

The hike takes about 60 minutes, beginning at Saba’s famous Hell’s Gate and leading to the top of the highest point ont the island, Mount Scenery, which soars to 2,877 feet.

Heading to Saba? Make sure you try the island’s signature place to stay, the Queen’s Gardens.

— CJ

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