Briant2010-03-312010-03-312010-03-31https://hdl.handle.net/2139/6412Colour: Sepia; Style: Landscape; Other: Bordered; DividedHere is a vintage photograph showing the vent and the cracks of a mud volcano in Trinidad. The phrase "mud-volcano" commonly applies to a relatively violent eruption or surfaces extrusion of watery mud or clay which is almost always accompanied by methane gas, and which generally tends to build up a solid mud or clay deposit around its orifice which may have a conical or volcano-like shape. Trinidad’s mud volcanoes can be found at: Devil’s Woodyard, Hindustan, near Princes Town; Piparo, central Trinidad; Palo Seco, south-east Trinidad; Anglais Point; Digity Village, Penal; the Poole Mud Vent and Chatam Bay, south-east Trinidad.enPlease contact the Main Library, The University of the West Indies for permission to use the digitized images. wimail@sta.uwi.eduTrinidad and TobagoPostcardsMud volcanoes--Trinidad and TobagoVolcanoes--Trinidad and TobagoA Mud Volcano, TrinidadImage