Trinidad population is around 1.3 million personArea 2km 5,128 period 2010I hope this helps Lady.D
== == There is no exact year that the Syrians arrived in Trinidad and Tobago. They came in different boatloads over a period of ten years. Families were separated during this time but were later reunited. The Syrians began arriving in Trinidad in the early 1900's. By 1909 the first set of Syrian immigrants to Trinidad and Tobago, the majority of the present day Syrian community in Trinidad, had arrived.
they wern't brought here........they r the amerindians
in the year 1951 they became a separate emblem from the police service because the police and fire service use to be one unit before that period and they took the decision to make the Trinidad fire service a separate entity
None.
East Indians immigrant labour first came to Trinidad on the 30th May `1845
It's difficult to pinpoint a single individual who brought track and field to Trinidad and Tobago. The sport likely arrived through a combination of factors, including: British influence:During the British colonial period, track and field was introduced to the islands as part of the British education system. Local sporting traditions: Running and jumping were likely already practiced in some form as part of traditional games and activities. Growing international interest: The increasing popularity of track and field globally in the late 19th and early 20th centuries likely contributed to its local development. The establishment of the Amateur Athletic Association (AAA) in Trinidad and Tobago in 1946 marked a significant step in the formalization and organization of track and field in the country.
In "A House for Mr. Biswas" by V.S. Naipaul, the main illustrations include Mr. Biswas' struggle for independence and identity, his quest for a place to call his own in a colonial society, and the themes of displacement and alienation. The novel also reflects the cultural and social dynamics of Trinidad and Tobago during the time period it is set in.
Quarantine (segregating someone from everyone else until it is proved that they are healthy) gets its name because the period of segregation used to be forty days. The word is related to the French word for forty (quarante).
Generally, yes, but the animal has to go into quarantine for a long period (although it's down from the former 6 month period). Some animals are prohibited, such as hamsters.
'Quarantine means forty (40) days of separation. It is completed in order to prevent the spread of disease. It is thought that if a person/animal had been in contact with a communicable/contagious disease, then signs and symptons would appear within that period. Hence people/ amimals were isolated. The word quarantine comes from quarantena or quarantaine, meaning "forty days", used in the Venetian language in the 14th and 15th centuries and also in France. The word is designated in the period during which all ships were required to be isolated before passengers and crew could go ashore during the Black Death plague.
The quarantine period is usually in place to safeguard against the RABIES virus. As far as I have researched - The Pet Passport entry on Wikipedia states "...A correctly prepared cat or dog may be imported without quarantine into the United Kingdom from the following countries under the Pet passport scheme, but only by an authorised transport company..." - it then goes on to list a succession of approved countries, of which Australia is among them.You may like to contact the nearest British Embassy office in your part of Australia to get confirmation of this.