Mayaro
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mayaro is the name of a bay, a county, and a group of villages in southeastern Trinidad and Tobago.
Mayaro Bay is a large bay of the Atlantic Ocean on the east coast of the island of Trinidad in the Republic of Trinidad and Tobago. The beach which lines this bay, Mayaro Beach is a popular destination for holidays, long weekends, and it is one of the traditional places to spend the Easter holidays. The shore is lined with holiday homes. An almost uninterrupted line of coconut trees (Cocos nucifera) line the shore, testimony to the days when most of the area consisted of coconut plantations.
The "Mayaro District" was the first area of settlement on the east coast. Many estates were granted to French planters who settled Trinidad in the late eighteenth century. No roads crossed the island and the area was only accessible by steamer until the late nineteenth century. The name Mayaro is applied to several villages along the coast. The county of Mayaro occupies a large area of southwestern Trinidad, but the name is usually only applied to the coastal strip. County Mayaro is divided into two Wards - Trinity and Guayaguyare.
Along this strip a number of villages exist to which the name Mayaro is generally applied. From north to south these are: St. Joseph, Beau Sejour, Plaisance (often called Pierreville), Beaumont, St. Ann's, Radix, Ste. Marguerite, Lagon Doux, Grand Lagoon and Lagon Palmiste. Beyond that are several small villages and then the town of Guayaguayare.
Mayaro falls under the jurisdication of the Rio Claro-Mayaro Regional Corporation. Until 1990 it was administered together with the neighbouring county of Nariva by the Nariva-Mayaro County Council. Mayaro also associated with oil production - most Trinidad's oil and natural gas production comes from offshore oil fields to the east of Mayaro. The major producer is BP Trinidad & Tobago (bpTT), together with BHP Billiton. Onshore oil production is under the control of Petrotrin, although considerable area has been farmed out to small independent oil producers.
[edit] References
Mayaro is the name of a viral disease and virus in the togavirus group transmitted by a specific mosquito bite in certain South American regions. It may be manifested by a maculopapular rash, arthralgias (joint pains,) bone pains and myalgias (muscle pain,) headache and aching in the eyes as well as gastrointestinal symptoms -- diarrhea and vomiting, similar to Dengue. Symptoms usually last 3 to 5 days and are usually self limited with no long term consequences. The virus was first isolated at the old Trinidad Regional Virus Laboratory during the 1950s.
[edit] References
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&list_uids=10028074&dopt=Citation http://diariolavoz.net/seccion.asp?pid=18&sid=1755¬id=110912&fecha=10/20/2004
[edit] External links
Local Government in Trinidad and Tobago | ||
Regional Corporations - Couva-Tabaquite-Talparo - Diego Martin - Penal-Debe - Princes Town - Rio Claro-Mayaro - San Juan-Laventille - Sangre Grande - Siparia - Tunapuna-Piarco | ||
---|---|---|
Boroughs and Cities - Borough of Arima - Borough of Chaguanas - City of Port of Spain - Borough of Point Fortin - City of San Fernando | ||
Tobago House of Assembly | ||
Counties (historic) - Caroni - Mayaro - Nariva - Saint Andrew - Saint David - Saint George - Saint Patrick - Victoria |