trinidad
{{Short description|Largest island of Trinidad and Tobago}}
{{about|the island of Trinidad|the country as a whole|Trinidad and Tobago|other uses}}
{{Use Trinidadian English|date=August 2019}}
{{use dmy dates|date=August 2019}}
{{Infobox islands
| name = Trinidad
| image_name = Td-map.png
| image_caption = Map of Trinidad and Tobago
| image_size =
| map = Lesser Antilles
| map_caption = Location of Trinidad in the Lesser Antilles
| label_position = right
| native_name = {{native name|awd|Iëre • Kairi}}
| nickname = Land of the Hummingbird
| location = Eastern Caribbean
| coordinates = {{Coord|10.5|N|61.3|W|scale:1000000|display=inline,title}}
| archipelago =
| total_islands =
| major_islands =
| area_km2 = 4,768
| length_km =
| width_km =
| highest_mount = El Cerro del Aripo
| elevation_m = 940
| country = {{flag|Trinidad and Tobago}}
| country_admin_divisions_title = Island
| country_admin_divisions = Trinidad
| country_admin_divisions_title_1 = Regions
| country_admin_divisions_1 = 14
| country_largest_city = Chaguanas
| country_largest_city_population = 83,516
| demonym = Trinidadian
Trini (colloquial)
| population = 1,267,145
| population_as_of = 2011
| density_km2 = 266
| postal_code_type = Postal code
| postal_code = 10xxxx – 87xxxx{{cite web |url=https://1drv.ms/x/s!Ah9R_euidiIG4hXQNGbbrWQMtpIC |title=List of Postal Districts |date=July 29, 2018 |publisher=TTPOST |access-date=July 29, 2018}}
| ethnic_groups = {{tree list}}
- 37% Indo–Trinidadians
- 31.8% Afro-Trinidadians
- 23.5% Mixed
- 7.8% Dougla
- 1.3% Others{{efn|incl. 0.66% European (incl. 0.07% Portuguese), 0.31% Chinese, 0.11% Indigenous, 0.08% Arabs, 0.17% Others (incl. Latin Americans)}}
- 6.4% Not stated
{{tree list/end}}
| country_capital = Port of Spain
| country_leader_title = President
| country_leader_name = Christine Kangaloo
| country1_leader_title = Prime Minister
| country1_leader_name = Kamla Persad-Bissessar
| timezone = AST (UTC −4) (Trinidad does not observe DST)
| languages = English, Trinidadian Creole, Spanish, Trinidadian Hindustani, Antillean Creole (Patois)
{{Infobox|child=yes
| label1 = Currency | data1 = Trinidad and Tobago dollar (TTD)
| label2 = Religions | data2 = Christianity, Hinduism, Islam, Orisha (Shango), Rastafari, Bahá'í, Sikhism, Irreligion, others
}}
}}
File:Moruga - Christopher Columbus monument.jpg – Christopher Columbus monument. Columbus landed here on his third voyage in 1498. This is on the southern coast of the island of Trinidad]]
Trinidad{{efn|Pronounced {{IPAc-en|t|r|ɪ|n|ᵻ|d|æ|d|}}}} is the larger, more populous island of the Republic of Trinidad and Tobago, the country. The island lies {{convert|11|km|mi|abbr=on}} off the northeastern coast of Venezuela and sits on the continental shelf of South America. It is the southernmost island in the Caribbean. With an area of {{convert|4,768|km2|sqmi|abbr=on}}, it is also the fifth-largest in the Caribbean.
Name
The original name for the island in the Arawakan languages was {{lang|arw|Iëre}} which meant "Land of the Hummingbird".{{cite web |url=https://epicureandculture.com/trinidad-the-land-of-the-hummingbirds/ |title=Trinidad: The Land of the Hummingbirds |work=Epicure & Culture |date=15 May 2013 }} Christopher Columbus renamed it {{lang|es|La Isla de la Trinidad}} ('The Island of the Trinity'), fulfilling a vow he had made before setting out on his third voyage. {{cite book |title=The New Trinidad and Tobago: A Descriptive Account of the Geography and History of Trinidad and Tobago |last=Hart |first=Marie |year=1972 |orig-year=1965 |publisher=Collins |location=London and Glasgow |page=13}} This has since been shortened to Trinidad. Indo-Trinidadians called the island चीनीदत्त {{small|(Devanagari script)}}, 𑂒𑂲𑂢𑂲𑂠𑂞𑂹𑂞 {{small|(Kaithi script)}}, {{nastaliq| چینی دت}} {{small|(Perso-Arabic script)}}, Chinidat or Chinidad in Trinidadian Hindustani which translated to the land of sugar. The usage of the term goes back to the 19th century when recruiters from India would call the island Chinidat as a way of luring workers into indentureship.{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_n82hsbDJBMC&dq=chinidat&pg=PA204 |title=Dictionary of the English/Creole of Trinidad & Tobago: On Historical Principles - Lise Winer - Google Books |date=2009-01-16 |isbn=9780773576070 |accessdate=2022-08-26|last1=Winer |first1=Lise |publisher=McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP }} On Tuesday, 31 July 1498 Columbus sent a sailor to climb up to the main top and sighted a cluster of three peaks, therefore Columbus named the island Trinidad from the three peaks and Columbus's special devotion to the Trinity.{{cite book|title= Christopher Columbus, The Four Voyages}}
History
{{Main|History of Trinidad and Tobago}}
Caribs and Arawaks lived in Trinidad long before Christopher Columbus encountered the islands on his third voyage on 31 July 1498. The island remained Spanish until 1797, but it was settled mostly by French colonists from the French Caribbean, especially Martinique.Besson, Gerard (2000-08-27). "Land of Beginnings – A historical digest", Newsday Newspaper. In 1889 the two islands became a single British crown colony. Trinidad and Tobago was granted self-governance in 1958 and independence from the United Kingdom in August 1962,{{cite web |url = http://www.wdl.org/en/item/11332/ |title = Railroad Map of Trinidad |website = World Digital Library |date = 1925 |access-date = 2013-10-25 }} and it became a republic in September 1976.{{cite news|url=https://guardian.co.tt/opinion/45-years-a-republic-6.2.1389840.1663fd2aca|title=45 years a Republic|publisher=Trinidad & Tobago Guardian|author=|language=English|date=24 August 2021|accessdate=6 January 2022}}
Geography
Major landforms include the hills of the Northern, Central and Southern Ranges (Dinah ranges), the Caroni, Nariva and Oropouche Swamps, and the Caroni and Naparima Plains. Major river systems include the Caroni, North and South Oropouche and Ortoire Rivers. There are many other natural landforms such as beaches and waterfalls.
Trinidad has two seasons per the calendar year: the rainy season and the dry season. El Cerro del Aripo, at 940 metres (3,084 ft), is the highest point in Trinidad. It is part of the Aripo Massif and is located in the Northern Range on the island, northeast of the town of Arima.{{cite web|url=https://www.britannica.com/place/Trinidad-and-Tobago#ref516194|title=Trinidad and Tobago - People, Culture, Map, & Flag|website=britannica.com}}
Demographics
{{Main|Demographics of Trinidad and Tobago}}
As of the 2011 Trinidad and Tobago Census, Trinidad's population was 37 % Indo-Trinidadian, 32 % Afro-Trinidadian, and 24 % mixed race.{{cite web | url=https://cso.gov.tt/wp-content/uploads/2020/01/2011-Demographic-Report.pdf | title=2011 Demographic Report | publisher=Central Statistical Office | accessdate=2025-04-22}} Venezuela has also had a great impact on Trinidad's culture, such as introducing the music style parang to the island. Many groups overlap. For example, a "Dougla" is a person of African and Indian descent.{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=-Icr9Klvm6wC&q=french+creole|title=Race Relations in Colonial Trinidad 1870-1900|first=Bridget|last=Brereton|author-link=Bridget Brereton|date=6 June 2002|publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=9780521523134|access-date=2 August 2017|via=Google Books}}{{cite web|url=http://www.une.edu.au/langnet/definitions/trinidad.html|title=Trinidad French Creole|website=Une.edu.au|access-date=2 August 2017|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100328025807/http://www.une.edu.au/langnet/definitions/trinidad.html|archive-date=28 March 2010}}{{cite journal |url=http://content.karger.com/produktedb/produkte.asp?typ=fulltext&file=HHE2005060003129 |title=Estimates of African, European and Native American Ancestry in Afro-Caribbean Men on the Island of Tobago |first1=Iva |last1=Miljkovic-Gacica |first2=Robert E. |last2=Ferrell |first3=Alan L. |last3=Patrick |first4=Candace M. |last4=Kammerer |first5=Clareann H. |last5=Bunker |journal=Human Heredity |volume=60 |number=3 |date=2005 |pages=129–133 |doi=10.1159/000089553 |pmid=16282694 |s2cid=42174747 |access-date=2011-07-15 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110713135418/http://content.karger.com/produktedb/produkte.asp?typ=fulltext&file=HHE2005060003129 |archive-date=2011-07-13 |url-access=subscription }}
Culture
There are multiple festivals on Trinidad, featuring the music of the Caribbean and the steelpan (which originated on Trinidad and is the country's national instrument); These festivals{{cite web|url=https://www.tripadvisor.com/Travel-g147387-s408/Trinidad-And-Tobago:Caribbean:Events.And.Festivals.html|title=Trinidad and Tobago: Events & Festivals - TripAdvisor|website=www.tripadvisor.com}} include the multi-national, pre-Lenten Carnivál, J'ouvert, and Panorama, the national steelpan competition.
In addition to the traditional Christian holidays and official public days (such as Boxing Day, Christmas, Easter Sunday, Easter Monday, Emancipation Day, Good Friday, Independence Day, Labour Day, New Year's Day, and Republic Day) in Trinidad, the island nation also celebrates a significant percentage of its population's Indian ancestry (of both Hindu and Muslim backgrounds), with officially-recognised holidays such as Divali, Eid al-Fitr and Indian Arrival Day. Sites of cultural or religious significance include Mount Saint Benedict, the Temple in the Sea, and the Karyasiddhi Hanuman murti in Carapichaima.{{cite web|url=http://www.discovertnt.com/trinidad-tobago-celebrations-festivals-2015/#axzz57gv1P2Um|title=Trinidad & Tobago celebrations & festivals - Discover Trinidad & Tobago|date=21 January 2015|website=discovertnt.com}}{{cite web|url=http://www.tntisland.com/festivals.html|title=Trinidad & Tobago Festival & Holidays|website=www.tntisland.com}}
Zoology
{{Further|Natural history of Trinidad and Tobago}}
The island of Trinidad has a rich biodiversity.{{cite web|url=https://sta.uwi.edu/fst/lifesciences/uwi-zoology-museum|title=UWI Zoology Museum - The Department of Life Sciences|website=sta.uwi.edu}} The fauna is overwhelmingly of South American origin. There are about 100 species of mammals including the Guyanese red howler monkey, the collared peccary, the red brocket deer, the ocelot and about 70 species of bats.{{cite web | url=http://www.trinibats.com/the-bats-of-trinidad.html | title=Bats of Trinidad | publisher=TriniBats.com | access-date=2016-11-27}} There are over 400 species of birds including the endemic Trinidad piping-guan. Reptiles are well represented, with about 92 recorded species including the largest species of snake in the world, the green anaconda, the spectacled caiman, and one of the largest lizards in the Americas, the green iguana. Trinidad is also the largest leatherback turtle nesting site in the western hemisphere; they nest on Trinidad's eastern and northern beaches. There are 37 recorded frog species, including the tiny El Tucuche golden tree frog, Trinidad poison frog, and the more widespread huge cane toad.Jowers, M., & Downie, J. (2004). Distribution of the frog Mannophryne trinitatis (Anura: Dendrobatidae) in Trinidad, West Indies. Living World, 2004. About 43 species of freshwater fish are known from Trinidad, including the well known guppy. It is estimated that there are at least 80,000 arthropods, and at least 600 species of butterflies.{{cite web|url=http://www.zstt.org/|title=Zoological Society of Trinidad and Tobago Inc. - Official Website|website=www.zstt.org}}
The William Beebe Tropical Research Station (founded by William Beebe), also known as Simla, lies {{convert|8|km|0}} north of Arima.
Economy
The economy of Trinidad and Tobago is diversified, based to a large extent on oil and natural gas. It is one of the leading gas-based export centers in the world, being one of the top five exporters of liquefied natural gas and the largest onshore natural gas well was recently discovered in southern Trinidad. This has allowed Trinidad to capitalize on the biggest mineral reserves within its territories. It is an oil-rich country and stable economically.{{cite web|url=https://www.gecf.org/countries/trinidad-and-tobago|title=Trinidad and Tobago|website=www.gecf.org}}{{Cite web |title=Overview |url=https://www.worldbank.org/en/country/trinidadandtobago/overview |access-date=2024-04-26 |website=World Bank |language=en}}
Geology
The Venezuela Tertiary Basin is a subsidence basin formed between the Caribbean and South American plates, and is bounded on the north by the coast ranges of Venezuela and the Northern Range of Trinidad, and bounded on the south by the Guayana Shield.Bane & Chanpong, p. 392. This Guayana shield supplied fine-grained clastic sediments, which with the subsidence, formed a regional negative gravity anomaly and growth faults.Bane & Chanpong, p. 387. Oil and gas discoveries from the Pliocene Moruga Group include Teak (1968), Samaan (1971), Poui (1972) and Galeota.Woodside, P.R., The Petroleum Geology of Trinidad and Tobago, 1981, USGS Report 81-660, Washington: US Dept. of the Interior, pp. 2 and 25 These fields are mainly faulted anticline traps producing from depths of {{convert|1.2|to|4.2|km|abbr=on}} subsea, with Teak possessing a hydrocarbon column almost {{convert|1|km|abbr=on}} thick.
The Northern Range is an Upper Jurassic-Lower Cretaceous range of metamorphic rocks striking east and dipping south. The range's southern boundary is marked by a fault extending from the El Pilar Fault System in Venezuela. South of this fault is the Northern Basin, or Caroni Syncline, consisting of Tertiary sedimentary rocks unconformably overlying Jurassic and Cretaceous sedimentary rocks. South of this basin is the Central Range, consisting of Upper Tertiary sedimentary rocks lying unconformably atop Lower Eocene and Paleocene rocks. South of this range is the Naparima Plain, a thrust belt of Oligocene and Lower Tertiary beds.
Hydrocarbon bearing anticlines include those associated with Pitch Lake, Forest Reserve, Point Fortin, Penal, Barrackpore, and Balata Fields. The Los Bajos Fault is a wrench fault, with Lower Pliocene displacement of 6.51 miles, bordered on the north by the Siparia syncline, and on the south by the Erin syncline. Finally, the Southern Range consists of anticlinal folds, including the Rock Dome-Herrera anticline and the Moruga-West Field. East of this Rock Dome are en echelon folds containing the Lizard Springs Field. South of these folds is another fold trend containing the Moruga-East, Guayaguayare, Beach, and Galeota Fields. South of the Morne Diablo-Quinam Erin Field westward is a strongly folded anticline associated with shale diapirism, which extends west southwestward to the Pedernales Field in southeast Venezuela. The northeast portion of the Southern Range separates into a northern trend containing the Lizard Springs, Navette, and Mayaro Fields, while the southern trend contains the Beach Field.{{rp|5–9}}
Recreation
Trinidad is considered one of the best places in the world to catch Atlantic tarpon.{{cite web |last1=Olander |first1=Doug |title=World's Best Tarpon Fishing Spots |url=https://www.sportfishingmag.com/tarpon-fishing-best-locations/ |website=sportfishingmag.com |date=29 May 2014 |publisher=Sport Fishing Magazine |access-date=21 June 2019}}
See also
{{Portal|Trinidad and Tobago|Caribbean|Islands}}
References
{{Reflist}}
Sources
- Bane, S.C.; Chanpong, R.R. (1980). "Geology and Development of the Teak Oil Field, Trinidad, West Indies". in Giant Oil and Gas Fields of the Decade: 1968–1978. AAPG Memoir 30. Tulsa: American Association of Petroleum Geologists. {{isbn|0891813063}}.
External links
{{Commons category|Trinidad, Trinidad and Tobago|Trinidad}}
- {{wikivoyage-inline|Trinidad}}
- {{Wiktionary-inline|Trinidad}}
- [http://www.gotrinidadandtobago.com/ Gotrinidadandtobago.com: Trinidad and Tobago tourism website]
{{Islands of Trinidad and Tobago}}
{{Authority control}}
{{notelist}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Trinidad}}
Category:Islands of Trinidad and Tobago
Category:Former Spanish colonies
Category:1530 establishments in the Spanish Empire
Category:1530s establishments in the Spanish West Indies
Category:1790s disestablishments in the Spanish West Indies