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A view showing the town of Soufrière, Santa Lucia, and its harbor.
The Twin Pitons are the national symbol of Saint Lucia and appear on the flag. They are mountainous volcanic plugs (created when magma hardens within a vent on an active volcano).  Gros Piton is 798 m (2,619 ft) high and Petit Piton is 743 m (2,438 ft) high; both are located near the town of Soufriere, Saint Lucia. Photo courtesy of NOAA / Anthony R. Picciolo.
Sulfur Springs on Santa Lucia is billed as the world's only drive-in volcano. The two boxes house monitoring devices that keep track of seismic activity.
Pigeon Island is a former islet (180,000 sq m; 44 acres) off the north point of Saint Lucia that was joined to the mainland in 1972 by a man-made causeway.
View from Fort Rodney on Pigeon Island, Santa Lucia, showing Rodney Bay and the causeway from the island to the mainland.
Santa Lucia's Diamond Falls  in Diamond Botanical Gardens gets its color from minerals in the water.
A view from the southern tip of Saint Lucia. The Maria Islands Nature reserve is on the right, the town of Vieux Fort is in the left center, and the Twin Pitons can be seen as bumps on the left horizon.
A view of Vieux Fort, the southernmost town on Saint Lucia and the site of the island's airport. The Twin Pitons, on the southwestern shore of Saint Lucia, can be seen in the distance.