Columbus Channel
The Columbus Channel or Serpent's Mouth (Spanish: Boca de la Serpiente), is a strait lying between Icacos Point in southwest Trinidad and Tobago and the north coast of Venezuela. It leads from the Atlantic Ocean to the Gulf of Paria. The channel is about nine miles (14 km) wide at its narrowest point.[1]
Columbus Channel | |
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View over the Columbus Channel from Icacos, Trinidad. | |
Columbus Channel Columbus Channel | |
Location | Gulf of Paria–Caribbean Sea (Atlantic Ocean) |
Coordinates | 10°00′N 61°30′W |
Type | Strait |
Basin countries | Venezuela Trinidad and Tobago |
History
The passage was named by Christopher Columbus on his third voyage.[2]
gollark: *That* just cost a CB magma, so occasionally you can get lucky, I guess?
gollark: I managed to get a 3G PB prize IOU for a 3G prize from CB prize. That was a weird day.
gollark: Via madness, there are actually 3G PB prizes in existence.
gollark: If you particularly care it's probably possible to get something more compact than JSON, but I guess that usually won't matter.
gollark: Well, obviously.
References
- DK (7 April 2015). Atlas A-Z: 6th edition: A Pocket Guide to the World Today. DK Publishing. pp. 338–. ISBN 978-1-4654-4252-9.
- Williams, Eric (1942). History of the People of Trinidad and Tobago. Buffalo: Eworld Inc. p. 8. ISBN 9781617590108.
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