No. You can, however, boat from the Atlantic to the Caribbean through the Atlantic. The two merge seamlessly into each other.
You could go through the St. Lawrence Seaway from the Atlantic to the Great Lakes, make a portage, and then head down one of the tributaries of the Mississippi into the Mississippi itself, and thence into the Gulf of Mexico, and from THERE head to the Caribbean. But that would be a lot more work.
No. The great lakes flow out through the St. Laurence river to the Atlantic.
The bodies of water around the Americas include the Arctic, Atlantic & Pacific Oceans,; the Bering Straits & Bering Sea; the Gulf of California; the Gulf of Mexico; the Hudson Bay; the Caribbean Sea; the Great Lakes; the Mississippi; Missouri, Ohio rivers. The Amazon. The Orinoco.
-Caribbean reef shark, Caribbean ect.. -Six gill shark, Northeast Pacific ect.. -Great White, Pacific ocean ect.. -Great hammerhead, Atlantic ocean ect..
One can register for a Caribbean tour through companies such as Caribbean Princess and Royal Caribbean International via their respecitve websites, both of which have great deals at the moment.
The Pacific to the west and the Atlantic to the east, on the eastern part the sea it's call the Caribbean. Great Place to visit! :D Answered by Josito, Joe Murphy :D
No. Wrong direction. All of the great lakes empty into the Atlantic, through the St. Lawrence river.
One of the major rivers that runs through the Great Plains is the Canadian River.
Two great rivers run through China Proper: the Yellow River in the north, and the Yangtze (or Yangzi ) River to the south.
In 1983, the remaining British Colonies were reclassified "British Dependent territories". In 2002 they were renamed "British Overseas territories".As of 2014, there are 14 British Overseas territories left.Akroitiri & Dhekelia (Enclaves on Cyprus)Anguilla (Caribbean)Bermuda (Atlantic Ocean)British Antarctic TerritoryBritish Indian Ocean TerritoryBritish Virgin Islands (Caribbean)Cayman Islands (Caribbean)Falkland Islands (South Atlantic)Gibraltar (Iberian Peninsula)Montserrat (Caribbean)Pitcairn (Pacific)St. Helena, Ascension & Tristan Da Cunha (South Atlantic)South Georgia & South Sandwich Islands (South Atlantic)Turks & Caicos (Caribbean)
Because of the Gulf Stream, which carries warm water from the Caribbean to the North Atlantic.
The Great Ouse and the Thames
The Caribbean sea and the Atlantic Ocean surround Barbados The Caribbean sea touches Barbados west coast (thus the water / beaches are more tranquil and easy to swim in) The Atlantic Ocean surrounds the east coast and this is thus more dangerous to swim in (Please don't unless you are a great swimmer.) http://www.kissbarbados.com/do-you-know-barbados.php