Geography of Martinique
The French Overseas Department of Martinique is a Caribbean island belonging to the Lesser Antilles group in the Caribbean Sea, southeast of Cuba and north of Trinidad and Tobago. It is part of the French West Indies. It lies near the Tropic of Cancer between 14° 26' and 14°53' latitude north and 63° 9' and 63° 34' longitude west. At most some 50 miles long and 22 miles wide, Martinique covers an area of 425 square miles. Its coastline is so indented that no part of the island is more than seven miles from the sea.
The "Island of flowers ", as Martinique is called, is a volcanic island with rather low mountains which form steep cliffs along the coasts. It can be divided into three natural zones: a mountainous region in the north, with its two highest points at Mount Pelée and the Pitons du Carbet ; the Lamentin Plain in the center; and a hilly region in the south, composed of eroded remnants of old volcanoes and dominated by the Montagne du Vauclin and the Morne du Diamant.
Statistics
Area:total:
1,100 km²
land:
1,060 km²
water:
40 km²
Area – comparative:
slightly more than twice the size of the Isle of Man, or six times the size of the City of Washington, D.C.
Land boundaries:
0 km
Maritime claims:
exclusive economic zone:
territorial sea:
Natural resources:
coastal scenery and beaches, cultivable land
Land use:
arable land:
8%
permanent crops:
8%
permanent pastures:
17%
forests and woodland:
44%
other:
23%
Irrigated land:
40 km²
Natural hazards:
hurricanes, flooding, and volcanic activity
Extreme points
- Northernmost point – headland at Macouba Beach
- Easternmost point – Cap Ferré
- Southernmost point – Îlet Cabrits
- Westernmost point – unnamed headland near Anse Belleville
- Highest point – Mont Pelée 1,397 m
- Lowest point – Caribbean Sea 0 m
Terrain
The more populated, field-covered southern part of Martinique is occupied by lower ridges and hills, towering around 400–500 metres above sea level, with a rugged coastline including numerous white sand corallian coves. The deeply populated central part of the island, home of the vast majority of the population, and formed by the lower slopes of the Pitons du Carbet massif and the Lamentin and Rivière Salée plains, covered with sugarcane and mangroves, is a transition zone between the mountainous north and the hilly south.
Martinique is surrounded by small islets and hosts three main peninsulas, the Presqu'île de la Caravelle Peninsula in the Atlantic coast, the Trois Îlets Peninsula in the Southwest Caribbean coast and the Saint Anne Peninsula in the Saint Lucia Channel.
Martinique has many rivers, but owing to its size and topography, no large ones. The most important of them —the Lorrain, Galion, Capote and Lézarde—flow through the center of the island. The rivers in the south—the Salée and Pilote—are short and often dry, while in the north they are just torrents cut by numerous waterfalls.