
Click on the picture to watch this audio slideshow about bird watching at Óshólmar, an area at the mouth of Eyjafjardará river just outside Akureyri in north Iceland, the largest Icelandic town outside the capital region. Not many tourists know about this attraction, which is perfect for a walk in the sun.
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Located just 40 minutes by car and six minutes from Keflavík International Airport, Sandgerdi (“Sandy Hedge”) is a growing town of 1,700 with a storied history and loads to see. Read this special promotion about the hidden secrets of one of Iceland's most charming seaside villages.
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Scientists who are researching Icelandic clams state in a new report that oxygen isotopes inside the clams may prove the best source on global climate change that has been found so far.
An ancient Icelandic manuscript on display at the Culture House. Photo by Páll Stefánsson.
Moreover, the clams show that the ancient Icelandic manuscripts were quite accurate in their description of the climate while most ancient climate measurements only show the average temperature, mbl.is reports.
Isotope specialists William Patterson at the University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, Canada, who is the report’s main author, said in an interview with Nature News that the strength of various oxygen isotopes in the clams changes depending on the water’s temperature.
The colder the water, the higher the strength level of the isotope oxygen-18, Patterson explained. The water and ocean temperature in shallow waters is in close connection with the air temperature.
Twenty-six clams that were found in sediment in an Icelandic bay were investigated. They usually live for two to nine years and the isotope percentage in each clam contains information on the situation of the environment while the clam lived.
One of Patterson’s goals was to find out whether there was some truth in ancient written sources on the weather in Iceland.
For example, Landnáma (The Book of Settlement) describes an exceptionally cold period, during which people fed on ravens and foxes and old and weak people were thrown off cliffs.
Patterson’s study of clams confirm that such a period of cold had indeed occurred, when the ocean temperature in summer only measured 5-6°C (41-43°F) compared to 7.5-9.5°C (45.5-49°F) one century earlier.
A skeleton from a person who suffered from the Paget’s disease of bone was unearthed this week during an archeological excavation project at Skriduklaustur in east Iceland, where a monastery was once operated.
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The human being will be on display for the first time in its natural environment in the Reykjavík Family Park and Zoo next weekend. Visitors can observe three men and one woman in a cage after 10 am on Saturday and Sunday.
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The formal Videy island swim took place yesterday and there were three participants, two men and one woman, Thórdís Hrönn Pálsdóttir, who is the first woman to participate in the Videy swim since 1959.
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The Environment Agency intends to investigate whether the Heath Protection Authority handled the situation in Eskifjördur, east Iceland, in the correct manner when contaminated water from a trawler was carried into the town’s drinking water system.
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The second issue of the print edition of Iceland Review 2010 has just been published. Entitled “Under the Volcano” the magazine dedicates 20 pages, words and pictures, to the volcanic eruption in Eyjafjallajökull glacier which made headlines all over the word. New subscribers will receive the book Puffins as a gift and all subscribers are part of a draw to win a trip to Iceland. Click here to subscribe to the magazine.
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Hendrikka Waage is an accomplished jewellery designer whose first children’s book Rikka and Her Magic Ring in Iceland, takes readers on an enchanted and educational journey through the country. It’s beautifully illustrated and a good lesson in geography, but the plot could have been better thought through and the moral of the story is a bit too prominent.
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On the third day of the Eyjafjallajökull eruption we drove from Skógar to Hvolsvöllur in total darkness, a distance of 18 kilometers. It was frightening, the darkness being so impenetrable that we could hardly see out the windows of the car. We could see faint lights from the farm standing right next to the highway.
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Ásmundur Sveinsson is among the foremost Icelandic sculptors. The current exhibition in the Ásmundur Sveinsson Museum in Reykjavík is entitled “I choose women who thrive…” and features women as symbols in the sculptor’s art. The works in the exhibition are selected from his entire career.
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