16 U.S.C. § 410tt
Verified against govinfo.gov as of June 20, 2026View official text on govinfo.gov ↗
The Congress finds that the Salt River Bay area of the north central coast of St. Croix, United States Virgin Islands—
- (1)has been inhabited, possibly as far back as 2000 B.C., and encompasses all major cultural periods in the United States Virgin Islands;
- (2)contains the only ceremonial ball court ever discovered in the Lesser Antilles, village middens, and burial grounds which can provide evidence for the interpretation of Caribbean life prior to Columbus;
- (3)is the only known site where members of the Columbus expeditions set foot on what is now United States territory;
- (4)was a focal point of various European attempts to colonize the area during the post-Columbian period and contains sites of Spanish, French, Dutch, English, and Danish settlements, including Fort Sale, one of the few remaining earthwork fortifications in the Western Hemisphere;
- (5)presents an outstanding opportunity to preserve and interpret Caribbean history and culture, including the impact of European exploration and settlement;
- (6)has been a national natural landmark since February 1980 and has been nominated for acquisition as a nationally significant wildlife habitat;
- (7)contains the largest remaining mangrove forest in the United States Virgin Islands and a variety of tropical marine and terrestrial ecosystems which should be preserved and kept unimpaired for the benefit of present and future generations; and
- (8)is worthy of a comprehensive preservation effort that should be carried out in partnership between the Federal Government and the Government of the United States Virgin Islands.