Nikky B2 Anguilla

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AnguillaAnguilla

Nicole Murray

Scrub island

Anguilla is a set of small islands in the Caribbean. It’s islands are between the Caribbean Sea and the North Atlantic Ocean and is east of Puerto Rico. It was colonized by English settlers from Saint Kitts in 1650 and in 1980 it won over it’s freedom after several attempts and became a separate British dependency.

Scrub island is an uninhabited island that is about three square miles. On the leeward side is a breath taking white sand beach which usually has calm waters. It is the only one in Anguilla that faces completely away from the prevailing winds and sees. The interior has rolling low hills that are soft and green like the ones in Scotland. The only inhabitants are wild goats.

Mimi bay

Mimi bay is a common hidden spot in Anguilla. It can be found at the end of a long dirt road. It is often called the romantic beach, due to its amount of privacy. It located on the southeastern shore, between Seafeathers Bay and Sile Bay, facing the open Atlantic Ocean, which causes it to have high waves and currents. The beach is about 1/3 of a mile long and has a rocky western shoreline

Most of Anguilla’s land is low lying islands and coral and limestone. The western coast of Scrub

island has low rolling hills. The coast line of the islands can either be rocky or smooth.

Sandy island

Anguilla is bare and flat and is fringed by white sand beaches. It is 16 miles long and a maximum of 3.5 miles wide; its long thin shape gave the island its name. Anguille, which is French for eel.The territory includes several small uninhabited offshore islands, the largest of which are Dog, Scrub, and Sombrero islands and Prickly Pear Cays

Sandy ground

People depend on the ocean for their transportation.. They often have to worry about hurricanes, due to where they are located on the map.

Salt pond

The majority of the population of Anguilla is of African descent. The official language is English, and the main religious denominations are Anglican and Methodist. The island has experienced steady population growth, and Anguillans live relatively long lives

Little HarbourLittle Harbour is on the south coast of Anguilla, facing St. Martin, between Blowing Point and Corito Bay

Anguillan culture is a mix of African and British traditions. To preserve and promote the island’s heritage, the Anguilla National Trust was created in 1993. The organization oversees the island’s museum as well as its national parks. Numerous festivals are held on the island, many of which commemorate historical events. Summer Festival is the island’s largest celebration and is highlighted by competitions, parades, and dances. Boating is Anguilla’s national sport, and cricket is also popular

Meads Bay

The earliest inhabitants of Anguilla were Amerindian tribes from South America, commonly referred to as Arawaks, who traveled to the island on rafts and dugout canoes, settling in fishing, hunting and farming groups. The Amerindian name for the island was "Malliouhana". The earliest Amerindian’s found on Anguilla have been dated to around 1300 BC, and remains of settlements dating from 600 AD have been uncovered. Religious artefacts and remnants of ceremonies found at locations such as Big Springs and Fountain Cavern suggest that the pre-European inhabitants were extremely religious in nature. The Arawaks are said to have been later displaced by fiercer Carib tribes, but this version of events is disputed by some.

Crocus Bay

14,108

$108.9 million

$8,800 $8,800

3.54 deaths/1,000 live births

81 years

1.75 children born

boat building and offshore financial services

small quantities of tobacco vegetables cattle raising

one

13.11 births

4.39 deaths

3,000

-$42.87 million

1)http://news.ai/ref/mimibay.html

2)http://www.lonelyplanet.com/maps/caribbean/anguilla/

3)https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/av.html

4)http://beachlover.myphotoalbum.com/view_photo.php?set_albumName=album01&id=Picture_836

5)http://www.jonz.net/Anguilla/

6)http://www.colantonio.net/anguilla/

7)https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/av.html

8)http://www.caribbeanislandsforvisitors.com/anguilla/

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