The name conjures up daunting images of cold weather, Viking influence, Artic winds and too much ice. Surprisingly, the country, only 884 miles northwest of Ireland, has had nowhere near the influence ...
Volcanoes, geysers and waterfalls were among the extraordinary natural features seen by Varndean School pupils on a geography trip to Iceland. The geography students spent five days on the Nordic ...
My goal was to pinpoint the spot where the Pacific Northwest’s earthquakes and volcanoes come from. Yes, I knew about the Juan de Fuca plate slipping under the westward-moving North American plate.
Odysseas Chloridis says “We have already done quite a lot of damage, and we’re not doing enough to prevent [more] . . . but I’m not hopeless.” Do you think he is right to have hope about tourism in ...
Researchers have uncovered ancient DNA suggesting that Viking Norse people may have arrived in Iceland as early as 810 AD, a full 70 years earlier than the widely accepted date of 874 AD. In the most ...
FIFTY Romsey pupils took part in an annual visit to Iceland over the Easter break. The Geography students, from The Romsey School, arrived at the airport near Reykjavik over the Easter weekend.
“It’s not exactly easy to be a farmer in Iceland”, so why are they discussing the planting of corn?