Successful player and
contestant Steve Ledoux shares his skills in
choosing lottery numbers, winning
sweepstakes and contests, and spotting
illegal scams in this savvy collection of
prize-winning strategies. Lottery and
sweepstakes hopefuls learn how to find the
right contests to enter, how to protect
themselves from cheaters, and what to expect
after winning, including how to deal with
the IRS and give interviews to the media.
Internet sweepstakes, contests, and
resources complete this guide to winning the
jackpot.
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The Caribbeana region
consisting of the Caribbean Sea, its islands
(most of which are enclosed by the sea), and the
surrounding coasts. The region is located
southeast of the Gulf of Mexico and North
America, east of Central America, and to the
north of South America.
Situated largely on the Caribbean Plate, the
region comprises more than 7,000 islands,
islets, reefs, and cays. These islands, called
the West Indies, generally form island arcs that
delineate the eastern and northern edges of the
Caribbean Sea.These islands are called the West
Indies because when Christopher Columbus landed
there in 1492 he believed that he had reached
the Indies (in Asia).
The region consists of the Antilles, divided
into the larger Greater Antilles which bound the
sea on the north, the Lesser Antilles on the
south and east (including the Leeward Antilles),
the Bahamas, and the Turks and Caicos Islands or
the Lucayan Archipelago, which are in fact in
the Atlantic Ocean north of Cuba, not in the
Caribbean Sea.
Geopolitically, the West Indies are usually
regarded as a sub-region of North America and
are organized into 30 territories including
sovereign states, overseas departments, and
dependencies. From January 3, 1958, to May 31,
1962, there was a short-lived country called the
Federation of the West Indies composed of ten
English-speaking Caribbean territories, all of
which were then UK dependencies. The West Indies
cricket team continues to represent many of
those nations.
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The geography and climate in the Caribbean
region varies. Some islands in the region have
relatively flat terrain of non-volcanic origin.
These islands include Aruba (possessing only
minor volcanic features), Barbados, Bonaire, the
Cayman Islands, Saint Croix, The Bahamas or
Antigua. Others possess rugged towering
mountain-ranges like the islands of Cuba,
Hispaniola, Puerto Rico, Jamaica, Dominica,
Montserrat, Saba, Saint Kitts, Saint Lucia,
Saint Thomas, Saint John, Tortola, Grenada,
Saint Vincent, Guadeloupe, Martinique, and
Trinidad & Tobago.
The climate of the region is tropical but
rainfall varies with elevation, size and water
currents (cool upwellings keep the ABC islands
arid). Warm, moist tradewinds blow consistently
from the east creating rainforest/semidesert
divisions on mountainous islands. Occasional
northwesterlies affect the northern islands in
the winter. The region enjoys year-round
sunshine, divided into 'dry' and 'wet' seasons,
with the last six months of the year being
wetter than the first half.
The waters of the Caribbean Sea host large,
migratory schools of fish, turtles, and coral
reef formations. The Puerto Rico trench, located
on the fringe of the Atlantic Ocean and
Caribbean Sea just to the north of the island of
Puerto Rico, is the deepest point in all of the
Atlantic Ocean.
Hurricanes, which at times batter the region,
usually strike northwards of Grenada, and to the
west of Barbados. The principal hurricane belt
arcs to northwest of the island of Barbados in
the Eastern Caribbean.
The region sits in the line of several major
shipping routes with the man-made Panama Canal
connecting the western Caribbean Sea with the
Pacific Ocean.