Puerto Rico Bank Explained

Puerto Rico Bank
Local Name:carbonate platform and insular shelf
Map:Caribbean
Map Mark:Cercle rouge 100%.svg
Map Width:300
Map Mark Width:35
Coordinates:18.2833°N -65.6°W
Location:Caribbean
Archipelago:Puerto Rico
Virgin Islands
Area Km2:21.000
Country: Puerto Rico
Country Admin Divisions Title:Islands and Cays
Country Admin Divisions:140
Country1 Admin Divisions Title:Islands and Cays
Country1 Admin Divisions:52[1]
Country2 Admin Divisions Title:Islands and Cays
Country2 Admin Divisions:36

The Puerto Rico Bank (PRB) (Spanish: Banco de Puerto Rico), also known as the Puerto Rican Bank (PRB), is a carbonate platform and insular shelf comprising the archipelagos of Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands, located between the Greater Antilles and the Lesser Antilles in the northeastern Caribbean.[2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8] [9] Last subaerially exposed from the Last Glacial Maximum in the Last Glacial Period of the Late Pleistocene Age to the Northgrippian Age of the Holocene Epoch, the bank connected Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands into a single landmass until sea level rise fragmented it into the present-day islands between 10,000 to 7,000 years Before Present (8,050 to 5,050 years Before Christ).[10] [11] [12] [13] [14] [15] It is within the Puerto Rico–Virgin Islands microplate between the North American plate and Caribbean plate.

Name

Most commonly known as the Puerto Rico Bank and Puerto Rican Bank, the bank is named after the largest island within its limits, the eponymous main island of the archipelago of Puerto Rico. The part of the bank covering the Virgin Islands is occasionally referred to as the Virgin Bank.[16] [17] [18]

Location

Separated from the Greater Antilles by the Mona Passage and from the Lesser Antilles by the Anegada passage in the northeastern Caribbean Sea of the Atlantic Ocean, the Puerto Rico Bank compromises the main island of Puerto Rico, the Spanish Virgins Islands of Vieques and Culebra, the U.S. Virgin Islands of Saint Thomas and Saint John, and the British Virgin Islands of Jost Van Dyke, Tortola, Virgin Gorda, and Anegada. It includes all surrounding minor islands and cays of each one of the aforementioned major islands. The westernmost islands of Desecho, Mona, and Monito of Puerto Rico, and the southernmost island of Saint Croix of the U.S. Virgin Islands do not form part of the bank, as they lie on their own platforms.[19]

Extent

Including the island within the Puerto Rico Bank, it measures 350 km (218 mi) in length and 40 to 80 km (25 to 50 mi) in width. Around the main island of Puerto Rico, the bank is 2 to 15 km (1 to 9 mi) wide from the southeast to the southwest, over 15 to 2 km (9 to 1 mi) wide from the southwest to northwest, and less than 2 km (1 mi) wide from the northwest to the northeast.[20] Around the archipelago of the Virgin Islands, the bank is 40 to 65 km (25 to 40 mi) wide.

The Puerto Rico Bank is less than 79 m (260 ft) in depth, with the portion connecting all the islands being less than 40 m (131 ft) in depth.[21] All islands and cays in the archipelago of Puerto Rico, including Vieques and Culebra, are connected less than 25 m (82 ft). Similarly, the main islands of the U.S. Virgin Islands and the British Virgin Islands are connected by less than 25 m (82 ft).[22] [23] [24] [25] [26] [27] The Spanish Virgin Islands of Vieques and Culebra and the American and British islands are separated by a narrow strait, the Virgin Passage, which is 16 km (10 m) in length and 20 to 32 m (65 to 105 ft) in depth.

With an area of 21,000 sq km (8,108 sq mi),[28] it was last fully exposed during the Last Glacial Maximum when the sea level was 120 m (400 ft) lower than the present-day. The bank was inundated by sea level rise during the Late Pleistocene and Early Holocene, losing subaerial connection the main island of Puerto Rico and the Spanish Virgin Islands with the U.S. Virgin Islands and British Virgin Islands 10,000 to 8,000 years Before Present ago (8,050 to 6,050 years Before Christ ago). The main island of Puerto Rico with Vieques, and the U.S. Virgin Islands and the British Virgin Islands with each other lost their land connection 7,000 years BP ago (5,050 years BC ago), while the main island of Puerto Rico with some of its minor islands, cays, and islets 3,000 BP years ago (1,050 BC years ago).

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Where is the U.S. Virgin Islands: Geography . 2024-10-05 . Virgin Islands . en-US.
  2. Web site: Marine Regions · Puerto Rico Trench (Trench) . 2024-09-26 . www.marineregions.org.
  3. Web site: Geology and Hydrogeology of the Caribbean Islands Aquifer System of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands . 8 October 2024 . U.S. Geology Survey.
  4. Web site: Archipelagic genetics in a widespread Caribbean anole . 8 October 2024 . Wiley Online Library.
  5. Web site: The Bunce Fault and Strain Partitioning in the Northern Lesser Antilles . 8 October 2024 . ResearchGate.
  6. Web site: Sea level, topography and island diversity: Phylogeography of the Puerto Rican Red-eyed Coquí, Eleutherodactylus antillensis . 8 October 2024 . ResearchGate.
  7. Web site: The polyphased tectonic evolution of the Anegada Passage in the northern Lesser Antilles subduction zone . 24 September 2024 . ResearchGate.
  8. Web site: Exploring Puerto Rico’s Seamounts, Trenches, and Troughs: Background: Mission Plan . 2024-08-27 . NOAA Office of Ocean Exploration and Research . EN-US.
  9. Web site: Island lists of West Indian amphibians and reptiles . Florida Museum of Natural History . 137-147.
  10. Web site: Biogeography of Puerto Rican Bank . 8 October 2024 . ResearchGate.
  11. Web site: Boraginaceae Varronia rupicola (Urb.) Brtton : biogeog- raphy, systematic placement and conservation genetics of a threatened species endemic to the Caribbean . 8 October 2024 . Birkbeck Institutional Research Online . 86-87.
  12. Web site: The beetles of the Lesser Antilles (Insecta, Coleoptera): diversity and distributions . 8 October 2024 . DigitalCommons . 10 and 16.
  13. Web site: Por el camino verde: Long-term tropical socioecosystem dynamics and the Anthropocene as seen from Puerto Rico . 24 August 2024 . Research Gate.
  14. Web site: Bats of St. Vincent, Lesser Antilles . 8 October 2024 . ResearchGate.
  15. Web site: The Late Pleistocene Human Settlement of Interior North America: The Role of Physiography and Sea Level Change . 8 October 2024 . ResearchGate.
  16. Web site: Virgin Islands . 8 October 2024 . National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).
  17. Web site: Archaeological reconnaissance of the Island of St. John, United States Virgin Islands . 2024-10-10 . original-ufdc.uflib.ufl.edu . 2 . en.
  18. Web site: Bats of Guana, British Virgin Islands . 8 October 2024 . AMNH Library Digital Repository.
  19. Web site: Island lists of West Indian amphibians and reptiles . 8 October 2024 . ResearchGate.
  20. Web site: A 50-year Reconstruction of Fisheries Catch in Puerto Rico . 8 October 2024.
  21. Web site: PR/USVI Prioritization Mapping Inventory . 2024-10-09 . noaa.hub.arcgis.com . en-us.
  22. Web site: Baroclinic Coupling Improves Depth‐Integrated Modeling of Coastal Sea Level Variations Around Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands . 8 October 2024 . ResearchGate.
  23. Web site: CARICOOS . CariCOOS . 2024-10-09 . www.caricoos.org . en.
  24. Web site: New species and new records of Cumacea (Crustacea: Peracarida: Cumacea) from mesophotic reefs of Puerto Rico and U.S. Virgin Islands, Caribbean Sea . 24 August 2024 . Research Gate.
  25. Web site: Potential Structuring Forces on a Shelf Edge Upper Mesophotic Coral Ecosystem in the US Virgin Islands . 8 October 2024 . ResearchGate.
  26. Web site: Physical drivers of community structure and growth among mesophotic coral ecosystems surrounding St. Thomas, U. S. Virgin Islands . 8 October 2024 . ResearchGate.
  27. Web site: Radiocarbon in otoliths of tropical marine fishes: Reference ΔC chronology for north Caribbean waters . 8 October 2024 . ResearchGate.
  28. Web site: Linking micro- and macroevolutionary perspectives to evaluate the role of Quaternary sea-level oscillations in island diversification . 8 October 2024 . University of Michigan Library.