fossil_digger Report This Comment Date: November 22, 2005 06:08AM
Virgin Islands National Park comprises three-quarters of St John, one of the
islands that make up the United States Virgin Islands in the Carribeans, a
thousand miles east of Miami, close to Puerto Rico. It is a tropical laid-back
paradise of pearl-white beaches surrounded by steep verdant hills dropping down
into turquoise bays full of coral reefs.
Laurence Rockefeller must have had a sense of "paradise found" when he
first visited St John in the 1950s, for then he bought more than half the island
and eventually donated to the federal government most of the land which is
protected by the National Park. The land however had a rich and less than
peacefull human history of tribal wars, competition among the Danish, Dutch,
English, and Spanish, and slave uprisals during a sugar plantation area of which
centuries old ruin remains. The island was born of violent volcanic eruptions
and uplifting which gave it a dramatic topography and a wide range of exposure
and rainfall, creating large tracts of lush tropical forest laced with fragrant
flowers, mangrove coasts, as well as desert-like enviroments. It it was then
shaped present form by the building of coral reefs which together with the waves
generated by the steady trade winds, created its perfect beaches.