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The West Indies is an island subregion in the middle of the Americas, surrounded by the North Atlantic Ocean and the Caribbean Sea, which comprises 13 independent island countries and 19 dependencies in three archipelagos: the Greater Antilles, the Lesser Antilles, and the Lucayan Archipelago, including the English-speaking countries and territories in the wider region, such as Guyana and Belize.
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Area | 239,681 km2 (92,541 sq mi) |
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Population | 44,182,048 |
Population density | 151.5/km2 (392/sq mi) |
Ethnic groups | Indigenous, Afro-Caribbean, Euro-Caribbean, Indo-Caribbean, Latino or Hispanic (Spanish, Portuguese, Mestizo, Mulatto, Pardo, and Zambo), Chinese, Jewish, Arab, Javanese,Hmong, Multiracial |
Religions |
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Demonym | West Indian, Caribbean |
Countries | |
Dependencies | 18
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Languages | Spanish, Caribbean English, French, Dutch, French Creoles, English Creoles, Dutch Creoles, Papiamento, Caribbean Hindustani, Chinese, and others |
Time zones | UTC−05:00 to UTC−04:00 |
Internet TLD | Multiple |
Calling code | Multiple |
Largest cities | List of metropolitan areas in the Caribbean Santo Domingo Havana Port-au-Prince San Juan Kingston Santiago de Cuba Santiago de los Caballeros Nassau Camagüey Cap-Haïtien |
UN M49 code | 029 – Caribbean419 – Latin America019 – Americas001 – World |
The subregion includes all the islands in the Antilles, in addition to The Bahamas and the Turks and Caicos Islands, which are in the North Atlantic Ocean. The term is often interchangeable with "Caribbean", although the latter may also include coastal regions of Central and South American mainland nations, including Mexico, Belize, Honduras, Panama, Colombia, Venezuela, French Guiana, Guyana, and Suriname, as well as the Atlantic island nation of Bermuda, all of which are geographically distinct from the three main island groups, but culturally related.
Terminology
The English term Indie is derived from the Classical Latin India, a reference to the territories in South Asia adjacent and east to the Indus River. India itself derived successively from Hellenistic Greek India ( Ἰνδία), ancient Greek Indos ( Ἰνδός), Old Persian Hindush (an eastern province of the Achaemenid Empire), and ultimately its cognate, the Sanskrit Sindhu, or "river", specifically the Indus River and its well-settled southern basin. The ancient Greeks referred to the Indians as Indoi (Ἰνδοί), which translates as "The people of the Indus".
In 1492, Christopher Columbus and his Spanish fleet left Spain seeking a western sea passage to the Eastern world, hoping to profit from the lucrative spice trade emanating from Hindustan, Indochina, and Insulindia, the regions currently found within the Indian Subcontinent and Southeast Asia, which were first simply referred to by Spanish and Portuguese explorers as the Indias (Indies).
Thinking he had landed on the easternmost part of the Indies in the Eastern world when he came upon the New World, Columbus used the term Indias to refer to the Americas, calling its native people Indios (Indians). To avoid confusion between the known Indies of the Eastern Hemisphere and the newly discovered Indies of the Western Hemisphere, the Spanish named the territories in the East Indias Orientales (East Indies) and the territories in the West Indias Occidentales (West Indies). Originally, the term West Indies applied to all of the Americas.
The Indies from both regions were further distinguished depending on the European world power to which they belong. In the East Indies, there were the Spanish East Indies and the Dutch East Indies. In the West Indies, the Spanish West Indies, the Dutch West Indies, the French West Indies, the British West Indies, and the Danish West Indies.
The term was used to name the Spanish Council of the Indies, the British East India Company, the Dutch East India and West India companies, the French East India Company, and the Danish East India Company.
History
Many cultures were indigenous to these islands, with evidence dating some of them back to the mid-6th millennium BCE.
In the late 16th century, French, English and Dutch merchants and privateers began operations in the Caribbean Sea, attacking Spanish and Portuguese shipping and coastal areas. They often took refuge and refitted their ships in the areas the Spanish could not conquer, including the islands of the Lesser Antilles, the northern coast of South America, including the mouth of the Orinoco, and the Atlantic Coast of Central America. In the Lesser Antilles, they managed to establish a foothold following the colonisation of Saint Kitts in 1624 and Barbados in 1626, and when the took off in the mid-17th century, they brought in thousands of enslaved Africans to work the fields and mills as labourers. These enslaved Africans wrought a demographic revolution, replacing or joining with either the indigenous Caribs or the European settlers who were there as indentured servants.
The struggle between the northern Europeans and the Spanish spread southward in the mid to late seventeenth century, as English, Dutch, French and Spanish colonists, and in many cases, enslaved Africans first entered and then occupied the coast of The Guianas (which fell to the French, English and Dutch) and the Orinoco valley, which fell to the Spanish. The Dutch, allied with the Caribs of the Orinoco, would eventually carry the struggles deep into South America, first along the Orinoco and then along the northern reaches of the Amazon.
Since no European country had occupied much of Central America, gradually, the English of Jamaica established alliances with the Miskito Kingdom of modern-day Nicaragua and Honduras and then began logging on the coast of modern-day Belize. These interconnected commercial and diplomatic relations comprised the Western Caribbean Zone in place in the early-18th century. In the Miskito Kingdom, the rise to power of the Miskito-Zambos, who originated in the survivors of a rebellion aboard a slave ship in the 1640s and the introduction of enslaved Africans by British settlers within the Miskito area and in Belize, also transformed this area into one with a high percentage of persons of African descent as was found in most of the rest of the Caribbean.
From the 17th through the 19th century, the European colonial territories of the West Indies were the French West Indies, British West Indies, the Danish West Indies, the Netherlands Antilles (Dutch West Indies), and the Spanish West Indies.
In 1916, Denmark sold the Danish West Indies to the United States for US$25 million in gold, per the Treaty of the Danish West Indies. The Danish West Indies became an insular area of the U.S., called the United States Virgin Islands.
Between 1958 and 1962, the United Kingdom re-organised all their West Indies island territories (except the British Virgin Islands and the Bahamas) into the West Indies Federation. They hoped that the Federation would coalesce into a single, independent nation. The Federation had limited powers, numerous practical problems, and a lack of popular support; consequently, it was dissolved by the British in 1963, with nine provinces eventually becoming independent sovereign states and four becoming current British Overseas Territories.
"West Indies" or "West India" was a part of the names of several companies of the 17th and 18th centuries, including the Danish West India Company, the Dutch West India Company, the French West India Company, and the Swedish West India Company.
West Indian is the official term used by the U.S. government to refer to people of the West Indies.
The term survives today mainly through the West Indies cricket team, representing all of the nations in the West Indian islands.
Geology
The West Indies are a geologically complex island system consisting of 7,000 islands and islets stretching over 3,000 km (2000 miles) from the Florida peninsula of North America south-southeast to the northern coast of Venezuela. These islands include active volcanoes, low-lying atolls, raised limestone islands, and large fragments of continental crust containing tall mountains and insular rivers. Each of the three archipelagos of the West Indies has a unique origin and geologic composition.
Greater Antilles
The Greater Antilles is geologically the oldest of the three archipelagos and includes both the largest islands (Cuba, Jamaica, Hispaniola, and Puerto Rico) and the tallest mountains (Pico Duarte, Blue Mountain, Pic la Selle, Pico Turquino) in the Caribbean. The islands of the Greater Antilles are composed of strata of different geological ages including Precambrian fragmented remains of the North American Plate (older than 539 million years), Jurassic aged limestone (201.3-145 million years ago), as well as island arc deposits and oceanic crust from the Cretaceous (145-66 million years ago).
The Greater Antilles originated near the Isthmian region of present-day Central America in the Late Cretaceous (commonly referred to as the Proto-Antilles), then drifted eastward arriving in their current location when colliding with the Bahama Platform of the North American Plate ca. 56 million years ago in the late Paleocene. This collision caused subduction and volcanism in the Proto-Antillean area and likely resulted in continental uplift of the Bahama Platform and changes in sea level. The Greater Antilles have continuously been exposed since the start of the Paleocene or at least since the Middle Eocene (66-40 million years ago), but which areas were above sea level throughout the history of the islands remains unresolved.
The oldest rocks in the Greater Antilles are located in Cuba. They consist of metamorphosed graywacke, argillite, tuff, mafic igneous extrusive flows, and carbonate rock. It is estimated that nearly 70% of Cuba consists of karst limestone. The Blue Mountains of Jamaica are a granite outcrop rising over 2,000 meters (6000'), while the rest of the island to the west consists mainly of karst limestone. Much of Hispaniola, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands were formed by the collision of the Caribbean Plate with the North American Plate and consist of 12 island arc terranes. These terranes consist of oceanic crust, volcanic and plutonic rock.
Lesser Antilles
The Lesser Antilles is a volcanic island arc rising along the leading edge of the Caribbean Plate due to the subduction of the Atlantic seafloor of the North American and South American plates. Major islands of the Lesser Antilles likely emerged less than 20 Ma, during the Miocene. The volcanic activity that formed these islands began in the Paleogene, after a period of volcanism in the Greater Antilles ended, and continues today. The main arc of the Lesser Antilles runs north from the coast of Venezuela to the Anegada Passage, a strait separating them from the Greater Antilles, and includes 19 active volcanoes.
Lucayan Archipelago
The Lucayan Archipelago includes The Bahamas and the Turks and Caicos Islands, a chain of barrier reefs and low islands atop the Bahama Platform. The Bahama Platform is a carbonate block formed of marine sediments and fixed to the North American Plate. The emergent islands of the Bahamas and Turks and Caicos likely formed from accumulated deposits of wind-blown sediments during Pleistocene glacial periods of lower sea level.
Countries and territories by subregion and archipelago
Caribbean (core area)
Antilles
Greater Antilles
Cayman Islands (United Kingdom)
Cuba
Jamaica
Navassa Island (United States)
Puerto Rico (United States)
- Hispaniola
Dominican Republic
Haiti
Lesser Antilles
Leeward Antilles
ABC islands
Aruba (Netherlands)
Bonaire* (Netherlands)
Curaçao (Netherlands)
Federal Dependencies of Venezuela (Venezuela)
Nueva Esparta (Venezuela)
Leeward Islands
Anguilla (United Kingdom)
Antigua and Barbuda
Guadeloupe (France)
- La Désirade
- Les Saintes
- Marie-Galante
Montserrat (United Kingdom)
Saint Barthélemy (France)
Saint Kitts and Nevis
Saint Martin (France)
SSS islands
Saba* (Netherlands)
Sint Eustatius* (Netherlands)
Sint Maarten (Netherlands)
- Virgin Islands
British Virgin Islands (United Kingdom)
Spanish Virgin Islands (United States)
U.S. Virgin Islands (United States)
Windward Islands
Dominica
Grenada
- Carriacou and Petite Martinique
Martinique (France)
Saint Lucia
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
Isolated islands in the Lesser Antilles
Barbados†
Trinidad and Tobago†
Lucayan Archipelago
Isolated island in the Caribbean
Aves Island (Venezuela)
Central America
Belize
Costa Rica
Guatemala
Honduras
Nicaragua
Panama
Quintana Roo (Mexico^)
San Andrés and Providencia (Colombia)
- Bajo Nuevo Bank~
- Serranilla Bank~
Yucatán (Mexico^)
Northern America
Bermuda (United Kingdom)
South America
Colombia
French Guiana (France)
Guyana
Suriname
Venezuela
N.B.: Territories in italics are parts of transregional sovereign states or non-sovereign dependencies.
* These three Dutch Caribbean territories form the BES islands.
†Physiographically, these are continental islands not part of the volcanic Windward Islands arc. Based on proximity, these islands are sometimes grouped with the Windward Islands culturally and politically.
~Disputed territories administered by Colombia.
^ The United Nations geoscheme includes Mexico in Central America.
See also
- Caribbean Basin Initiative
- Caribbean Basin Trade Partnership Act
- Caribbean Community
- History of the British West Indies
- Spanish colonization of the Americas
- West Indies Federation
- West Indies cricket team
References
- "World Population Prospects 2022". United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs, Population Division. Retrieved July 17, 2022.
- "World Population Prospects 2022: Demographic indicators by region, subregion and country, annually for 1950-2100" (XSLX) ("Total Population, as of 1 July (thousands)"). United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs, Population Division. Retrieved July 17, 2022.
- McWhorter, John H. (2005). Defining Creole. Oxford University Press US. p. 379. ISBN 978-0-19-516670-5.
- Johnson, Todd M.; Crossing, Peter F. (14 October 2022). "Religions by Continent". Journal of Religion and Demography. 9 (1–2): 91–110. doi:10.1163/2589742x-bja10013.
- "West Indies". World Atlas.
- "West Indies (island group, Atlantic Ocean)". Britannica.
- Caldecott, Alfred (1898). The Church in the West Indies. London: Frank Cass and Co. p. 11. Retrieved 12 December 2013.
- "India (noun)", Oxford English Dictionary (3rd ed.), 2009 (subscription required)
- Thieme 1970, pp. 447–450.
- Kuiper 2010, p. 86.
- "History of the Caribbean (West Indies)". www.historyworld.net. Archived from the original on 26 November 2020.
- "west+indies | Origin and meaning of phrase west+indies". Online Etymology Dictionary.
- "East Indies". Encyclopedia.com.
- "Two telegrams about the sale – The Danish West-Indies". The Danish West-Indies. Retrieved 13 October 2017.
- Garrison, William L.; Levinson, David M. (2014). The Transportation Experience: Policy, Planning, and Deployment. OUP USA. ISBN 9780199862719.
- "Info Please U.S. Social Statistics". Retrieved 1 October 2015.
- "West Indies | History, Maps, Facts, & Geography". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 12 March 2019.
- Ricklefs Robert; Bermingham Eldredge (27 July 2008). "The West Indies as a laboratory of biogeography and evolution". Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. 363 (1502): 2393–2413. doi:10.1098/rstb.2007.2068. PMC 2606802. PMID 17446164.
- Woods, Charles Arthur; Sergile, Florence Etienne, eds. (2001). Biogeography of the West Indies : patterns and perspectives (2nd ed.). Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press. ISBN 978-0849320019. OCLC 46240352.
- "Flora of the West Indies / Department of Botany, National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution". naturalhistory2.si.edu. Retrieved 14 April 2019.
- Graham, Alan (2003). "Geohistory Models and Cenozoic Paleoenvironments of the Caribbean Region". Systematic Botany. 28 (2): 378–386. doi:10.1043/0363-6445-28.2.378 (inactive 1 November 2024). ISSN 0363-6445. JSTOR 3094007.
{{cite journal}}
: CS1 maint: DOI inactive as of November 2024 (link) - Santiago–Valentin, Eugenio; Olmstead, Richard G. (2004). "Historical biogeography of Caribbean plants: introduction to current knowledge and possibilities from a phylogenetic perspective" (PDF). Taxon. 53 (2): 299–319. doi:10.2307/4135610. ISSN 1996-8175. JSTOR 4135610. S2CID 16369341. Archived from the original (PDF) on 17 June 2020.
- Iturralde-Vinent, Manuel A. (1 September 2006). "Meso-Cenozoic Caribbean Paleogeography: Implications for the Historical Biogeography of the Region". International Geology Review. 48 (9): 791–827. Bibcode:2006IGRv...48..791I. doi:10.2747/0020-6814.48.9.791. ISSN 0020-6814. S2CID 55392113.
- Khudoley, K. M.; Meyerhoff, A. A. (1971), "Paleogeography and Geological History of Greater Antilles", Geological Society of America Memoirs, Geological Society of America, pp. 1–192, doi:10.1130/mem129-p1, ISBN 978-0813711294
- geolounge (8 January 2012). "Caribbean Islands: the Greater Antilles". GeoLounge: All Things Geography. Retrieved 14 April 2019.
- Mann, Paul; Draper, Grenville; Lewis, John F. (1991), "An overview of the geologic and tectonic development of Hispaniola", Geological Society of America Special Papers, Geological Society of America, pp. 1–28, doi:10.1130/spe262-p1, ISBN 978-0813722627
- Santiago-Valentin, Eugenio; Olmstead, Richard G. (2004). "Historical Biogeography of Caribbean Plants: Introduction to Current Knowledge and Possibilities from a Phylogenetic Perspective". Taxon. 53 (2): 299–319. doi:10.2307/4135610. ISSN 0040-0262. JSTOR 4135610.
- "The University of the West Indies Seismic Research Centre". uwiseismic.com. Archived from the original on 30 March 2019. Retrieved 14 April 2019.
- "UNSD Methodology – Standard country or area codes for statistical use (M49)". Archived from the original on 2017-08-30. Retrieved 2020-05-04.
Sources
- Kuiper, K., ed. (2010), The Culture of India, Britannica Educational Publishing, ISBN 978-1-61530-203-1, retrieved 24 July 2011
- Thieme, P. (1970). "Sanskrit sindu-/Sindhu- and Old Iranian hindu-/Hindu-". In Mary Boyce; Ilya Gershevitch (eds.). W. B. Henning Memorial Volume. Lund Humphries. ISBN 978-0-85331-255-0.
Further reading
- Cave, Roderick, and R. Cave. 1978. "Early Printing and the Book Trade in the West Indies". Library Quarterly 48 (April): 163–92.
- Cromwell, Jesse. "More than Slaves and Sugar: Recent Historiography of the Trans-imperial Caribbean and Its Sinew Populations". History Compass (2014) 12#10 pp 770–783.
- Higman, Barry W. A Concise History of the Caribbean. (2011)
- Jones, Alfred Lewis (1905). 877–882. . The Empire and the century. London: John Murray. pp.
- Martin, Tony, Caribbean History: From Pre-colonial Origins to the Present (2011)
The West Indies is an island subregion in the middle of the Americas surrounded by the North Atlantic Ocean and the Caribbean Sea which comprises 13 independent island countries and 19 dependencies in three archipelagos the Greater Antilles the Lesser Antilles and the Lucayan Archipelago including the English speaking countries and territories in the wider region such as Guyana and Belize West IndiesArea239 681 km2 92 541 sq mi Population44 182 048Population density151 5 km2 392 sq mi Ethnic groupsIndigenous Afro Caribbean Euro Caribbean Indo Caribbean Latino or Hispanic Spanish Portuguese Mestizo Mulatto Pardo and Zambo Chinese Jewish Arab Javanese Hmong MultiracialReligions73 5 Christianity 52 3 Catholicism 20 2 Protestantism 1 0 other Christian20 6 no religion2 5 folk religions2 1 Hinduism1 3 othersDemonymWest Indian CaribbeanCountries13 Antigua and Barbuda Bahamas Barbados Cuba Dominica Dominican Republic Grenada Haiti Jamaica Saint Kitts and Nevis Saint Lucia Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Trinidad and TobagoDependencies18 Anguilla UK Aruba Netherlands Bonaire Netherlands British Virgin Islands UK Cayman Islands UK Curacao Netherlands Guadeloupe France Martinique France Montserrat UK Haiti Navassa Island United States and Haiti Puerto Rico United States Saba Netherlands Saint Barthelemy France Saint Martin France Sint Eustatius Netherlands Sint Maarten Netherlands Turks and Caicos Islands UK US Virgin Islands United States LanguagesSpanish Caribbean English French Dutch French Creoles English Creoles Dutch Creoles Papiamento Caribbean Hindustani Chinese and othersTime zonesUTC 05 00 to UTC 04 00Internet TLDMultipleCalling codeMultipleLargest citiesList of metropolitan areas in the Caribbean Santo Domingo Havana Port au Prince San Juan Kingston Santiago de Cuba Santiago de los Caballeros Nassau Camaguey Cap HaitienUN M49 code029 Caribbean 419 Latin America 019 Americas 001 World The subregion includes all the islands in the Antilles in addition to The Bahamas and the Turks and Caicos Islands which are in the North Atlantic Ocean The term is often interchangeable with Caribbean although the latter may also include coastal regions of Central and South American mainland nations including Mexico Belize Honduras Panama Colombia Venezuela French Guiana Guyana and Suriname as well as the Atlantic island nation of Bermuda all of which are geographically distinct from the three main island groups but culturally related TerminologyThe English term Indie is derived from the Classical Latin India a reference to the territories in South Asia adjacent and east to the Indus River India itself derived successively from Hellenistic Greek India Ἰndia ancient Greek Indos Ἰndos Old Persian Hindush an eastern province of the Achaemenid Empire and ultimately its cognate the Sanskrit Sindhu or river specifically the Indus River and its well settled southern basin The ancient Greeks referred to the Indians as Indoi Ἰndoi which translates as The people of the Indus The current composition of the Indies is as follows East Indies Indochina and Insulindia Indies Indian subcontinent and Myanmar West Papua part of East Indies West Indies present day historically included the Americas entirely West Indies region at times included In 1492 Christopher Columbus and his Spanish fleet left Spain seeking a western sea passage to the Eastern world hoping to profit from the lucrative spice trade emanating from Hindustan Indochina and Insulindia the regions currently found within the Indian Subcontinent and Southeast Asia which were first simply referred to by Spanish and Portuguese explorers as the Indias Indies Thinking he had landed on the easternmost part of the Indies in the Eastern world when he came upon the New World Columbus used the term Indias to refer to the Americas calling its native people Indios Indians To avoid confusion between the known Indies of the Eastern Hemisphere and the newly discovered Indies of the Western Hemisphere the Spanish named the territories in the East Indias Orientales East Indies and the territories in the West Indias Occidentales West Indies Originally the term West Indies applied to all of the Americas The Indies from both regions were further distinguished depending on the European world power to which they belong In the East Indies there were the Spanish East Indies and the Dutch East Indies In the West Indies the Spanish West Indies the Dutch West Indies the French West Indies the British West Indies and the Danish West Indies The term was used to name the Spanish Council of the Indies the British East India Company the Dutch East India and West India companies the French East India Company and the Danish East India Company HistoryMany cultures were indigenous to these islands with evidence dating some of them back to the mid 6th millennium BCE In the late 16th century French English and Dutch merchants and privateers began operations in the Caribbean Sea attacking Spanish and Portuguese shipping and coastal areas They often took refuge and refitted their ships in the areas the Spanish could not conquer including the islands of the Lesser Antilles the northern coast of South America including the mouth of the Orinoco and the Atlantic Coast of Central America In the Lesser Antilles they managed to establish a foothold following the colonisation of Saint Kitts in 1624 and Barbados in 1626 and when the took off in the mid 17th century they brought in thousands of enslaved Africans to work the fields and mills as labourers These enslaved Africans wrought a demographic revolution replacing or joining with either the indigenous Caribs or the European settlers who were there as indentured servants The struggle between the northern Europeans and the Spanish spread southward in the mid to late seventeenth century as English Dutch French and Spanish colonists and in many cases enslaved Africans first entered and then occupied the coast of The Guianas which fell to the French English and Dutch and the Orinoco valley which fell to the Spanish The Dutch allied with the Caribs of the Orinoco would eventually carry the struggles deep into South America first along the Orinoco and then along the northern reaches of the Amazon Island groups of the West Indies in relation to the continental Americas Since no European country had occupied much of Central America gradually the English of Jamaica established alliances with the Miskito Kingdom of modern day Nicaragua and Honduras and then began logging on the coast of modern day Belize These interconnected commercial and diplomatic relations comprised the Western Caribbean Zone in place in the early 18th century In the Miskito Kingdom the rise to power of the Miskito Zambos who originated in the survivors of a rebellion aboard a slave ship in the 1640s and the introduction of enslaved Africans by British settlers within the Miskito area and in Belize also transformed this area into one with a high percentage of persons of African descent as was found in most of the rest of the Caribbean From the 17th through the 19th century the European colonial territories of the West Indies were the French West Indies British West Indies the Danish West Indies the Netherlands Antilles Dutch West Indies and the Spanish West Indies In 1916 Denmark sold the Danish West Indies to the United States for US 25 million in gold per the Treaty of the Danish West Indies The Danish West Indies became an insular area of the U S called the United States Virgin Islands Between 1958 and 1962 the United Kingdom re organised all their West Indies island territories except the British Virgin Islands and the Bahamas into the West Indies Federation They hoped that the Federation would coalesce into a single independent nation The Federation had limited powers numerous practical problems and a lack of popular support consequently it was dissolved by the British in 1963 with nine provinces eventually becoming independent sovereign states and four becoming current British Overseas Territories West Indies or West India was a part of the names of several companies of the 17th and 18th centuries including the Danish West India Company the Dutch West India Company the French West India Company and the Swedish West India Company West Indian is the official term used by the U S government to refer to people of the West Indies The term survives today mainly through the West Indies cricket team representing all of the nations in the West Indian islands GeologyCaribbean Basin countriesThe subduction of the South American Plate and part of the North American Plate beneath the Caribbean Plate produces both the Puerto Rico Trench the deepest part of the Atlantic Ocean as well as the active volcanoes of the Lesser Antilles bottom left of the image south of the Virgin Islands The West Indies are a geologically complex island system consisting of 7 000 islands and islets stretching over 3 000 km 2000 miles from the Florida peninsula of North America south southeast to the northern coast of Venezuela These islands include active volcanoes low lying atolls raised limestone islands and large fragments of continental crust containing tall mountains and insular rivers Each of the three archipelagos of the West Indies has a unique origin and geologic composition Greater Antilles The Greater Antilles is geologically the oldest of the three archipelagos and includes both the largest islands Cuba Jamaica Hispaniola and Puerto Rico and the tallest mountains Pico Duarte Blue Mountain Pic la Selle Pico Turquino in the Caribbean The islands of the Greater Antilles are composed of strata of different geological ages including Precambrian fragmented remains of the North American Plate older than 539 million years Jurassic aged limestone 201 3 145 million years ago as well as island arc deposits and oceanic crust from the Cretaceous 145 66 million years ago The Greater Antilles originated near the Isthmian region of present day Central America in the Late Cretaceous commonly referred to as the Proto Antilles then drifted eastward arriving in their current location when colliding with the Bahama Platform of the North American Plate ca 56 million years ago in the late Paleocene This collision caused subduction and volcanism in the Proto Antillean area and likely resulted in continental uplift of the Bahama Platform and changes in sea level The Greater Antilles have continuously been exposed since the start of the Paleocene or at least since the Middle Eocene 66 40 million years ago but which areas were above sea level throughout the history of the islands remains unresolved The oldest rocks in the Greater Antilles are located in Cuba They consist of metamorphosed graywacke argillite tuff mafic igneous extrusive flows and carbonate rock It is estimated that nearly 70 of Cuba consists of karst limestone The Blue Mountains of Jamaica are a granite outcrop rising over 2 000 meters 6000 while the rest of the island to the west consists mainly of karst limestone Much of Hispaniola Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands were formed by the collision of the Caribbean Plate with the North American Plate and consist of 12 island arc terranes These terranes consist of oceanic crust volcanic and plutonic rock Lesser Antilles The Lesser Antilles is a volcanic island arc rising along the leading edge of the Caribbean Plate due to the subduction of the Atlantic seafloor of the North American and South American plates Major islands of the Lesser Antilles likely emerged less than 20 Ma during the Miocene The volcanic activity that formed these islands began in the Paleogene after a period of volcanism in the Greater Antilles ended and continues today The main arc of the Lesser Antilles runs north from the coast of Venezuela to the Anegada Passage a strait separating them from the Greater Antilles and includes 19 active volcanoes Lucayan Archipelago The Lucayan Archipelago includes The Bahamas and the Turks and Caicos Islands a chain of barrier reefs and low islands atop the Bahama Platform The Bahama Platform is a carbonate block formed of marine sediments and fixed to the North American Plate The emergent islands of the Bahamas and Turks and Caicos likely formed from accumulated deposits of wind blown sediments during Pleistocene glacial periods of lower sea level Countries and territories by subregion and archipelagoPolitical map of the West IndiesLife expectancy in the West Indies in 2019 and 2021 Caribbean core area Antilles Greater Antilles Cayman Islands United Kingdom Cuba Jamaica Navassa Island United States Puerto Rico United States Hispaniola Dominican Republic HaitiLesser Antilles Leeward Antilles ABC islands Aruba Netherlands Bonaire Netherlands Curacao Netherlands Federal Dependencies of Venezuela Venezuela Nueva Esparta Venezuela Leeward Islands Anguilla United Kingdom Antigua and Barbuda Guadeloupe France La Desirade Les Saintes Marie Galante Montserrat United Kingdom Saint Barthelemy France Saint Kitts and Nevis Saint Martin France SSS islands Saba Netherlands Sint Eustatius Netherlands Sint Maarten Netherlands Virgin Islands British Virgin Islands United Kingdom Spanish Virgin Islands United States U S Virgin Islands United States Windward Islands Dominica Grenada Carriacou and Petite Martinique Martinique France Saint Lucia Saint Vincent and the GrenadinesIsolated islands in the Lesser Antilles Barbados Trinidad and Tobago Lucayan Archipelago Bahamas Turks and Caicos Islands United Kingdom Isolated island in the Caribbean Aves Island Venezuela Central America Belize Costa Rica Guatemala Honduras Nicaragua Panama Quintana Roo Mexico San Andres and Providencia Colombia Bajo Nuevo Bank Serranilla Bank Yucatan Mexico Northern America Bermuda United Kingdom South America Colombia French Guiana France Guyana Suriname Venezuela N B Territories in italics are parts of transregional sovereign states or non sovereign dependencies These three Dutch Caribbean territories form the BES islands Physiographically these are continental islands not part of the volcanic Windward Islands arc Based on proximity these islands are sometimes grouped with the Windward Islands culturally and politically Disputed territories administered by Colombia The United Nations geoscheme includes Mexico in Central America See alsoGeography portalCaribbean Basin Initiative Caribbean Basin Trade Partnership Act Caribbean Community History of the British West Indies Spanish colonization of the Americas West Indies Federation West Indies cricket teamReferences World Population Prospects 2022 United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs Population Division Retrieved July 17 2022 World Population Prospects 2022 Demographic indicators by region subregion and country annually for 1950 2100 XSLX Total Population as of 1 July thousands United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs Population Division Retrieved July 17 2022 McWhorter John H 2005 Defining Creole Oxford University Press US p 379 ISBN 978 0 19 516670 5 Johnson Todd M Crossing Peter F 14 October 2022 Religions by Continent Journal of Religion and Demography 9 1 2 91 110 doi 10 1163 2589742x bja10013 West Indies World Atlas West Indies island group Atlantic Ocean Britannica Caldecott Alfred 1898 The Church in the West Indies London Frank Cass and Co p 11 Retrieved 12 December 2013 India noun Oxford English Dictionary 3rd ed 2009 subscription required Thieme 1970 pp 447 450 Kuiper 2010 p 86 History of the Caribbean West Indies www historyworld net Archived from the original on 26 November 2020 west indies Origin and meaning of phrase west indies Online Etymology Dictionary East Indies Encyclopedia com Two telegrams about the sale The Danish West Indies The Danish West Indies Retrieved 13 October 2017 Garrison William L Levinson David M 2014 The Transportation Experience Policy Planning and Deployment OUP USA ISBN 9780199862719 Info Please U S Social Statistics Retrieved 1 October 2015 West Indies History Maps Facts amp Geography Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 12 March 2019 Ricklefs Robert Bermingham Eldredge 27 July 2008 The West Indies as a laboratory of biogeography and evolution Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences 363 1502 2393 2413 doi 10 1098 rstb 2007 2068 PMC 2606802 PMID 17446164 Woods Charles Arthur Sergile Florence Etienne eds 2001 Biogeography of the West Indies patterns and perspectives 2nd ed Boca Raton FL CRC Press ISBN 978 0849320019 OCLC 46240352 Flora of the West Indies Department of Botany National Museum of Natural History Smithsonian Institution naturalhistory2 si edu Retrieved 14 April 2019 Graham Alan 2003 Geohistory Models and Cenozoic Paleoenvironments of the Caribbean Region Systematic Botany 28 2 378 386 doi 10 1043 0363 6445 28 2 378 inactive 1 November 2024 ISSN 0363 6445 JSTOR 3094007 a href wiki Template Cite journal title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint DOI inactive as of November 2024 link Santiago Valentin Eugenio Olmstead Richard G 2004 Historical biogeography of Caribbean plants introduction to current knowledge and possibilities from a phylogenetic perspective PDF Taxon 53 2 299 319 doi 10 2307 4135610 ISSN 1996 8175 JSTOR 4135610 S2CID 16369341 Archived from the original PDF on 17 June 2020 Iturralde Vinent Manuel A 1 September 2006 Meso Cenozoic Caribbean Paleogeography Implications for the Historical Biogeography of the Region International Geology Review 48 9 791 827 Bibcode 2006IGRv 48 791I doi 10 2747 0020 6814 48 9 791 ISSN 0020 6814 S2CID 55392113 Khudoley K M Meyerhoff A A 1971 Paleogeography and Geological History of Greater Antilles Geological Society of America Memoirs Geological Society of America pp 1 192 doi 10 1130 mem129 p1 ISBN 978 0813711294 geolounge 8 January 2012 Caribbean Islands the Greater Antilles GeoLounge All Things Geography Retrieved 14 April 2019 Mann Paul Draper Grenville Lewis John F 1991 An overview of the geologic and tectonic development of Hispaniola Geological Society of America Special Papers Geological Society of America pp 1 28 doi 10 1130 spe262 p1 ISBN 978 0813722627 Santiago Valentin Eugenio Olmstead Richard G 2004 Historical Biogeography of Caribbean Plants Introduction to Current Knowledge and Possibilities from a Phylogenetic Perspective Taxon 53 2 299 319 doi 10 2307 4135610 ISSN 0040 0262 JSTOR 4135610 The University of the West Indies Seismic Research Centre uwiseismic com Archived from the original on 30 March 2019 Retrieved 14 April 2019 UNSD Methodology Standard country or area codes for statistical use M49 Archived from the original on 2017 08 30 Retrieved 2020 05 04 SourcesKuiper K ed 2010 The Culture of India Britannica Educational Publishing ISBN 978 1 61530 203 1 retrieved 24 July 2011 Thieme P 1970 Sanskrit sindu Sindhu and Old Iranian hindu Hindu In Mary Boyce Ilya Gershevitch eds W B Henning Memorial Volume Lund Humphries ISBN 978 0 85331 255 0 Further readingWikimedia Commons has media related to West Indies Cave Roderick and R Cave 1978 Early Printing and the Book Trade in the West Indies Library Quarterly 48 April 163 92 Cromwell Jesse More than Slaves and Sugar Recent Historiography of the Trans imperial Caribbean and Its Sinew Populations History Compass 2014 12 10 pp 770 783 Higman Barry W A Concise History of the Caribbean 2011 Jones Alfred Lewis 1905 The West Indies The Empire and the century London John Murray pp 877 882 Martin Tony Caribbean History From Pre colonial Origins to the Present 2011 19 N 71 W 19 N 71 W 19 71