Island Of Mud Emerges Off Trinidad Coast
Tiny Caribbean Island Created By Mud Volcano Poses Threat To Boaters
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(CBS)
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Fast Facts Trinidad & Tobago Learn about the people, economy and history.
The island, breaching a few inches above the ocean's surface and stretching 500 feet long, was discovered recently roughly five miles northeast of Trinidad, said Roderick Stewart, a seismologist at the University of the West Indies in St. Augustine.
An advisory has been issued for small boats, which could lose buoyancy because of gas bubbling up from the underwater fissure or run aground in the mud.
The danger may be short-lived. Large waves are washing away the mud and the fissure may fade.
It is not the first time such tiny, short-lived islands have emerged off the coast of the twin-island Caribbean nation of Trinidad and Tobago. Temporary islands also were formed in 1964 and 2001.
The islands are created by what scientists call "mud volcanoes," a varying mixture of water, sediment and compressed pockets of natural gas that usually emerge along fault lines. A mud volcano even erupted on land here in the late 1990s, inundating part of a village. No one was injured.
Sediment deposits from rivers in nearby South America contribute to the phenomenon.
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- Had my own mud volcano the other day on the toliet.
It also involved a mixture of water, sediment and compressed natural gas.
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- I'll believe it when Marriott builds a resort there.
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- "It's the end of the world as we know it, and I feel fiiiiiinnnnneeee!!!!"
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- Political innuendos aside...Who the hell cares?
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