ōu zhōu:   
bīng dǎo Iceland   shǒudōu:léi wèi   guógūdàimǎ: is   
  cháozhèng
冰岛
  bīng dǎo gòng guó( TheRepublicofIceland) dài IS, jiǎn chēng bīng dǎogōng yuán 1903 nián bīng dǎo céng jiāng zhǐ yín bái sǔn de 'àn xiāng zài guó huī de 'àn shàng , zuò wéi běn mín de biāo zhìguó huā wéi sān jǐn
   wèi 'ōu zhōu de běi miàn 10.3 wàn píng fāng gōng rén kǒu 27.6 wàn( 2002 niánquán shì kān de wéi rénxīn jiào yīn xìn huì shì bīng dǎo de guó jiào huìjiào zhàn quán guó rén kǒu de 97%。 guān fāng yán wéi bīng dǎo wài mào hán diàn shāng qià tán yòng yīng shǒu léi wèi bīng dǎo yòu huǒ shān dǎo 、“ dǎo”、“ bīng fēng de ”、“ bīng huǒ zhī dǎozhī chēng
  1918 nián 12 yuè 1 dàn shí shàng réng chén shǔ dān mài。 1944 nián 6 yuè chéng gòng guó。 1971 nián 12 yuè 8 guó jiàn jiāo
   bīng dǎo rén jūn jìn sān wàn měi yuánshǔ zhōng děng guó jiāshuǐ chǎn yuán fēng chǎn pǐn chū kǒu 'é zhàn bīng dǎo zǒng chū kǒu 'é de 80% zuǒ yòuquán guó 13.5% de rén kǒu kào jiā gōng wéi shēng shì bīng dǎo guó mín jīng de zhòng yào zhī zhùbīng dǎo de lèi zhù yào yòu xuě qīng shā dīng děng zhōng xuě zuì duōròu wèi kǒujīng jià zhí hěn gāo shì zhǒng gāo shí pǐnshèn shòu 'ōu zhōu shì chǎng huān yíngnián liàng 1979 nián chuàng 164.9 wàn dūn de shǐ zuì gāo rén jūn 7.27 dūn shì jiè shǒu wèi
   bái sǔn shì bīng dǎo de guó niǎozhè shì zhǒng běi niǎo xíng fēi kuàishàn gōng niǎo lèibái sǔn yòu sān zhǒng xíng , zhēn zhèng bái de shǎo , cháng zhēn guì
   bīng dǎo huò wéi bīng dǎo lǎng
   dāng shāng diàn de yíng shí jiānzhèng cháng gōng zuò shí jiāncóng shàng 9 shí zhì zhōng 12 shíxià 1 shí zhì 5 shímǒu xiē shāng diàn xīng liù yíng bàn tiāndàn xià chú wài
   bīng dǎo duō shānzài láo fēng jǐng dàishì piàn xiǎo píng yuán yòu kuài de shí cháng 7 gōng gāo 30 xiàng píng fēng yòu liáng hǎo de kuò yīn xiào guǒshǐ zuò zài jiǎo luò de huì cān jiā zhě dōunéng tīng dào huì de yánzhè yàng de tiān huì chǎngzhēn shì bié qíng
   léi wèi shì bīng dǎo gǎngquán guó zhèng zhìjīng wén huà zhōng xīnyòu lèi jiā gōnghuà gōngshuǐ děng gōng léi wèi shù bǎi nián jiān zhí shì zuò zhuāng yuán。 17 shì chū chéng wéi guó wáng de huáng jiā zhuāng yuán。 1944 nián chéng wéi shǒu shì wài guó rén dào bīng dǎo yóu de diǎnléi wèi 'ōu zhōu suǒ yòu de shǒu tóngbìng fēi dào chù dōuyòu gāo lóu shàshì nèi jiāo tōng tōng chéng shàng chē dòng jiāng qián tóu qián xiāng shè shòu piào yuánzhè chéng shì de nuǎn shè bèi shuǐ gōng yìng chēng shì jiè huán jìng yōu měikōng qīng xīnshì zuò shì jiè shàng shǎo yòu de yān chéng shì
   bīng dǎo rén shòu gòu liǎo lián mián hán dōngduì yáng guāng xiàn 'àiměi nián 6、 7 yuè fèn cháng yòu tài yáng zhào yào tóng bái zhòushèn zhì kàn shū xiě xìndào liǎo dōng tiān gāng hǎo xiāng fǎnyòu shí zhěng tiān jiàn tài yángér yuè liàng dāng tóu láibīng dǎo rén jiù yòu shū guànměi dào dōng tiāncháng màn mànrén men jiù zài shū xué bīng dǎo shì wén huà shuǐ píng jiào gāo de guó jiā
   zhōng guó pài chuán de běn gǎng shì yīn wéi gǎnggāi dǎo wéi bīng dǎo chuán chǎng de zhuān yòng gǎng kǒuzhè shì chū kǒu chéng jiāo fāng miànzài jìn kǒu chéng jiāo fāng miànzhōng guó fāng miàn pài chuán jiē huò de zhuǎn chuán huò zhuǎn chuán gǎng kǒu shì 'ā léi wéi léi wèi guó bīng dǎo de háng kōng shuǐ yóu jiàn jūn yóu běi jīng sàn dān mài zhuǎndiàn bàodiàn huà jūn yóu běi jīng jīng lún dūn zhuǎn
   duì bīng dǎo rén lái shuōgěi xiǎo fèi shì zhǒng yòng xìng chēng bīng dǎo rén shì mào deyīnggāi jiào men de míng yuē huì dìng fēi zhǔn shí tán gōng zuò bān yào shì xiān yuē huì,“ shùn biàn jìn lái zuò zuòshì bīng dǎo de chuán tǒng yìng yāo dào zhù rén jiā chī fàn bān qíng kuàng xià gěi nán zhù rén huò zhù rén dài jiàn xiǎo pǐn jiù liǎo
  
   guó jiā
   rán miàn wéi wàn píng fāng gōng shì 'ōu zhōu zuì de guó jiāwèi běi yáng zhōng kào jìn běi juànbīng chuān miàn zhàn 000 píng fāng gōng wéi 'ōu zhōu 'èr dǎohǎi 'àn xiàn cháng yuē gōng quán jìngshì hǎi 400 800 de gāo yuán zhōng1/8 bèi bīng chuān gàiyòu100 duō zuò huǒ shān zhōng huó huǒ shān duō zuòhuá 'ěr huǒ shān wéi quán guó zuì gāo fēnghǎi 2119 bīng dǎo jīhū zhěng guó jiādōu jiàn zài huǒ shān yán shí shàng fēn néng kāi kěnshì shì jiè wēn quán zuì duō de guó jiāsuǒ bèi chēng wéi bīng huǒ zhī guóduō pēn quán húpō tuān liúzuì liú yóu 'ěr sāo cháng227 gōng bīng dǎo shǔ hán wēn dài hǎi yáng xìng hòubiàn huà chángyīn shòu wān nuǎn liú yǐng xiǎngjiào tóng wěi de fāng wēn xià zhào chángdōng zhào duǎnqiū dōng chū jiàn guāng
  
   tóng běi jīng shí chā lín zhì shí jiān wǎn 1 xiǎo shí běi jīng shí jiān wǎn 9 xiǎo shí
   guó diàn huà 354
   rén kǒu:27. wàn rén(2002 nián)。 jué duō shù wéi bīng dǎo rénshǔ 'ěr màn guān fāng yán wéi bīng dǎo yīng wéi tōng yòng yánjìn90 de rén xìn fèng jiào jiào pài
   shǒu léi wèi ( Reykjavik), rén kǒu112268 rén(2001 nián12 yuè), nián píng jūn wēn4 .3 quán guó jìn sān fēn zhī de rén shēng huó zài léi wèi
   xíng zhèng huáquán guó fēn wéi23 shěng、21 zhì shì 203 jiào
   jiǎn shǐ:8 shì ài 'ěr lán xiū dào shì shǒu xiān bīng dǎo。9 shì hòu bàn nuó wēi kāi shǐ xiàng bīng dǎo míngōng yuán930 nián jiàn huì bīng dǎo lián bāng。1262 niánbīng dǎo nuó wēi qiān dìng xié bīng dǎo chén shǔ nuó wēi。1380 nián bīngnuó tóng guī dān mài tǒng zhì。1904 nián huò nèi zhì。1918 niánbīng dān qiān dìng lián bāng guī dìng bīng wéi zhù quán guó jiādàn wài jiāo shì réng yóu dān mài kòng zhì。1940 nián dān mài bèi guó zhàn lǐngbīng dān guān zhōng duàntóng nián yīng jūn jìn zhù nián měi jūn dài yīng jūn zhù bīng。1944 niányuè16 bīng huì zhèng shì xuān jiě sàn bīng dān lián méng,17 chéng bīng dǎo gòng guó。1946 nián jiā lián guó,1949 nián chéng wéi běi yuē chéng yuán guó
  
   guó jiā shǐ
  
   mín shí dài bīng dǎo gòng guógōng yuán 860 nián nuó wēi rén de chuán zhǐ yùnàn piào liú zhì bīng dǎo。 874 nián bèi nuó wēi guó wáng zhú de luò shǒu lǐng yīng 'ěr . ā 'ěr xùn jūn lǐng jiā lái bīng dǎo dìng , men jiāng chù yòu pēn wēn quán de fāng mìng míng wéi léi wèi ( mào yān de xiá wān )。 hòu lái nuó wēi , jiànhuò yòu lái 'ài 'ěr lán de mín duàn zēng jiā。 10 shì qián , bīng dǎo shǐ shàng de mín shí jié shù。 930 nián zài léi wèi shǒu zhào kāi liǎo míng wéi 'ā 'ěr tíng de quán mín huìā 'ěr tíng shì huì , shì zhòng cái jiū fēn de tíng。 965 nián 'ā 'ěr tíng jiāng quán dǎo huàfēn chéng 4 xíng zhèng , shè yóu 3 míng cháng gòng tóng zhǎng guǎn de tíng , xíng chéng liǎo dài de bīng dǎo gòng guó jīng yòu jiào zhǎn jiào chuán , bìng gōng yuán 1000 nián chéng wèiguó jiàoyóu fēng jiàn guì fēn fēn tóu kào nuó wēi ,1262 nián bīng dǎo chéng wéi nuó wēi de shǔ guó , yóu nuó wēi guó wáng zhǐ pài zǒng guǎn zhì , cóng 'ér jié shù liǎo cún zài 300 nián zhī jiǔ de dài gòng miàn。 1202 nián hòu de bīng dǎo bīng dǎo chén nuó wēi hòu , ā 'ěr tíng sàng shī quán , zhǐ guān de zuò yòngnuó wēi zǒng nuó wēi de tuī xíng dào bīng dǎo , duì bīng dǎo shì yòu jué dìng quán。 1380 nián dān mài guó wáng jiān rèn nuó wēi guó wáng , bīng dǎo chéng wéi dān mài de yōng guó , yǐn bīng dǎo rén mín de fǎn duì。 1534 nián nuó wēi bèi dān mài jiān bìng , bīng dǎo chéng wéi dān mài shǔ 。 16 shì 30 nián dài hòu , jiào zhù jiào J. ā sōng (1484 1550) dòng bīng dǎo rén mín fǎn duì dān mài de tǒng zhì , hòu bèi zhèn 。 1602 nián dān mài guó wáng 'ān shì zài bīng dǎo tuī xíng mào lǒng duàn zhì , guī dìng běn gēn děng sān de dān mài shāng rén yōng yòu zài bīng dǎo cóng shì mào de quánmào lǒng duàn cháng shù zhe bīng dǎo jīng zhǎn , zhí dào 1854 nián dān mài cái bèi xiāo zhè zhǒng zhì cóng 19 shì zhōng , bīng dǎo mín zhù yùn dòng zài J. 'ěr sōng (1811 1879) lǐng dǎo xià zhú jiàn gāo zhǎng láizài bīng dǎo rén mín yào qiú zhì de zhī xià , dān mài zài 1843 nián tóng bīng dǎo chóngjiàn 'ā 'ěr tíng , dàn yòu guī dìng 'ā 'ěr tíng zhǐ shì xún gòu 'ér shì quán gòu。 1849 nián bīng dǎo yào qiú duì nèi zhì quán , bìng qiě zài 1851 nián zhào kāi quán guó huì zhèng shì chū shí xíng zhì de zhù zhāngjīng guò tán pàn , bīng dǎo zài 1874 nián yíng duì nèi shí xíng zhì de quán , ā 'ěr tíng chéng wéi gòu bìng zhì dìng de xiàn , dàn qiē zhòng wèn réng bào qǐng dān mài zhèng zhǔn。 1903 nián bīng dǎo cái dān shè zhèng lái chù guó nèi shì 。 19 shì bīng dǎo dǎng jiàn 。 1916 nián shè huì mín zhù dǎng jìn dǎng xiāng chéng zhè xiē zhèng dǎng zài zhēng de dǒu zhēng zhōng huī liǎo zuò yòng。 1918 nián 11 yuè 30 dān màibīng dǎo qiān dìng lián méng tiáo yuē , guī dìng bīng dǎo wéi zhù quán guó jiā , dàn wài jiāo shì yóu dān mài kòng zhìdān mài guó wáng réng wéi bīng dǎo de guó jiā yuán shǒu。 1940 nián 4 yuè dān mài bèi guó zhàn lǐng hòu , bīng dǎo tóng dān mài de lián bèi qiē duànbīng dǎo 'ā 'ěr tíng xuān xíng shǐ wài jiāo quán jūn shì fáng quán。 5 yuè , yīng guó chū bīng zhàn lǐng liǎo bīng dǎo。 1941 nián 7 yuè 8 , bīng dǎo měi guó qiān dìngzhàn shí fáng tiáo yuē》 , měi jūn dài yīng jūn jìn zhù bīng dǎobīng dǎo gòng guó shí 'èr shì jiè zhàn jié shù qián , bīng dǎo 1944 nián 2 yuè 25 xuān bīng dān lián méng tiáo yuē guò 。 3 yuè 8 , bīng dǎo 'ā 'ěr tíng tōng guò xīn xiàn , jué dìng chéng gòng guó。 6 yuè 16 zhèng shì xuān bīng dǎo tuō dān bīng lián méng。 6 yuè 17 , bīng dǎo gòng guó xuān chéng ,S. sōng rèn jiè zǒng tǒngměi guó zhù bīng dǎo jūn duì 1945 nián chè huí , jǐn bǎo liú liǎo kǎi wéi kōng jūn 。 1949 nián bīng dǎo jiā liǎo běi yáng gōng yuē zhì ,1951 nián tóng měi guó jié tiáo yuē , měi chéng dān bīng dǎo fáng rèn wéi tiáo jiàn yǔn měi guó zài bīng dǎo zhù jūn。 1956 nián qián , bīng dǎo zhèng duō yóu nóng mín jìn dǎng dǎng lián 。 1959 nián hòu duō yóu shè huì mín zhù dǎng dǎng lián měi guó jūn shì wèn cháng chéng wéi bīng dǎo rén mín suǒ guān qiē de zhèng zhì wèn ,1971 nián yóu rén mín lián méng zuǒ pài yóu lián méng děng zhèng dǎng lián de bīng dǎo zhèng yào qiú měi guó chè huí zhù jūntóng nián 12 yuè 8 , bīng dǎo zhōng guó jiàn wài jiāo guān bīng dǎo jīng cháng dào de lìng yīchóng wèn shì huá jiè wèn 。 1958 nián bīng dǎo jué dìng jiāng kuò dào 12 hǎi , yīng guó zài sān fǎn duì , liǎng nián hòu cái chéng rèn。 60 nián dài guó jǐng , bīng dǎo wéi bǎo mín ,1972 nián jiāng kuò dào 50 hǎi yīng guólián bāng guó duì chū qiáng yìng kàng , yīng guó hái chū dòng jūn jiàn wéi yīng guó chuán háng , bìng bīng dǎo de xún luó tǐng shēng duō jiū fēn , xíng chéng liǎo kuàng chí jiǔ de bīng yīng zhànhǎi guó tíng 1974 nián pàn jué jué rèn bīng dǎo xuān de 50 hǎi bīng dǎo 1974 nián yòu xuān jiāng kuò zhì 200 hǎi bīngyīng liǎng guó 1976 nián duàn jué wài jiāo guān , jīng 3 yuè tán pàn yīng guó chéng rèn liǎo bīng dǎo 200 hǎi , bìng bīng dǎo jiāo。 1980 nián 8 yuè 1 ,V. fēn 'ā duō 'ěr chéng wéi shì jiè shàng wèi mín xuǎn zǒng tǒng ,1984 nián 8 yuè 1 lián rèn
  
   guó jiā zhèng zhì
   zhèng zhìshí xíng gòng zhì huì zǒng tǒng gòng tóng zhí zhǎng quán yuàn zhí zhǎng quánzǒng tǒng zhèng gòng tóng yōng yòu xíng zhèng quánzǒng tǒng wèiguó jiā yuán shǒutōng guò zhí jiē xuǎn chǎn shēngduì zhèng de xíng wéi xiǎng yòu fǒu jué quánrèn nián lián xuǎn lián rèn huì yuán fēn shàng xià liǎng yuàn,1991 nián10 yuè bìng wéi yuàngòng yòu yuán63 míngrèn niánbīng dǎo jiàn jūn duì
  
   guó jiā jīng
   jīng shì jīng zhī zhùgōng chǎn pǐn jiā gōng liàn děng gāo néng hào gōng wéi zhùwài mào cún shuǐ yuán fēng rán yuán kuì shí yóu děng chǎn pǐn yào jìn kǒu kāi de nián shuǐ diàn liàng wéi640 néng nián diàn liàng 72 gōng chǔ ruòchú chǎn pǐn jiā gōng zhēn zhì děng qīng gōng wàigōng liàn děng gāo néng hào gōng wéi zhù shì bīng dǎo guó mín jīng de zhī zhù chǎn zhù yào zhǒng yòu máo lín xuě qīng jué fēn chǎn pǐn chū kǒu chǎn pǐn chū kǒu zhàn shāng pǐn chū kǒu zǒng 'é de jìn70%。 bīng dǎo de chuán duì zhuāng bèi jīng liáng lèi jiā gōng shù zài shì jiè shàng zhàn lǐng xiān wèisuǒ chù wěi gāo , zhào liàng shǎojǐn nán nóng chǎng nián chǎn400 00 dūn nóng zuò gēng miàn 1000 píng fāng gōng zhàn quán guó zǒng miàn de1%。 xùmù zhàn jiào zhù yào wèi fēn nóng yòng bèi yòng zuò liào cǎo chǎngxiāng yìng de máo fǎng zhì jiào ròunǎidàn zìjǐ yòu liáng shíshū càishuǐ guǒ běn kào jìn kǒuwēn shì péi hóng shìhuáng guā chǎn liàng mǎn guó nèi70% de xiāo fèi zài guó mín jīng zhōng zhàn zhòng yào wèibāo kuò shāng yínhángbǎo xiǎn gōng gòng děng chǎn zhí yuē zhàn guó nèi shēng chǎn zǒng zhí de bàncóng rén shù zhàn zǒng láo de sān fēn zhī 'èr qiáng。1980 nián zhǎn yóu shì zhù yào yóu diǎn yòu bīng chuānhuǒ shān mào pēn quán děngbīng dǎo de rén jūn guó nèi shēng chǎn zǒng zhí jìnwàn měi yuánmíng liè shì jiè qián máo de kōng shuǐ yuán de qīng xīn chún jìng zài shì jiè shàng kān chēng rén de píng jūn shòu mìng dào 82.2 suìnán78.1 suìquán mín wén huà chéng jiào gāozǎo zài100 duō nián qián bīng dǎo jiù xiāo miè liǎo wén máng。1999 nián bīng dǎo chéng wéi shì jiè shàng dòng diàn huà shuài zuì gāo de guó jiā
  
   guó jiā jūn shì
   jūn shìgēn xiàn bīng dǎo shè jūn duì。1949 nián jiā běi yáng gōng yuē zhì,1951 nián tóng měi guó qiān dìng fáng xié dìngyóu měi guó fáng měi zài bīng shè yòu kōng jūn zhù jūnbìng pèi yòu zhàn dǒu liè qián fēi léi zhàn děng jūn shì zhuāng bèi shè shībīng dǎo yòu zhī hǎi yáng xún luó duìbèi yòu xún luó tǐng xiē xiǎo xíng fēi bǎo hǎi shàng jiù gōng zuò
  
   duì wài guān
   zhōng guó guān :1971 nián12 yuèbīng dǎo zhōng guó jiàn shǐ wài jiāo guān 。1996 niánliǎng guó zhèng qiān shǔ liǎo zhōng bīng miǎn shuāngchóng zhēng shuì xié dìngzhè shì bīng dǎo 'ōu zhōu běi měi wài de guó jiā qiān shǔ miǎn shuāngchóng zhēng shuì xié dìng。2002 niányuèguó jiā zhù jiāng mín duì bīng dǎo jìn xíng guó shì fǎng wèn。2005 niányuèbīng dǎo zǒng tǒng sōng duì zhōng guó jìn xíng guó shì fǎng wèn
  
   guān guāng yóu
   bīng dǎo duì duō shù tàn xiǎn 'àihào zhě lái shuō shì xiǎng zhī xiàn zài lái měi guó de tàn xiǎn zhě shù liàng shì10 nián qián de liǎng bèi,2003 niánzǒng shù dào liǎo30 wàn rén héng héng shì zhè guó jiā rén kǒu zǒng shù de liǎng bèi hái duōzuì shuō de shì bīng dǎo dāng de jiā tàn xiǎn zhuāng bèi yóu gōng měi nián jīng rén de zhǎo dào xīn de tàn xiǎn xiàn xiē zhǎo 'ào fěi shā zhōng de tái yuán dàichūn yán de 'ā jiā huǒ shān kǒu liàng zhī shàn niǎo de wéi màn qún dǎozài bīng dǎo mín liàng zhōng de nán hǎi 'àn jìn,80% de huǒ shān dǎo bīng húpōshān dòng róng yán hùn zài jiā shàng cǎo cóng shēng yǒng yuǎn méi yòu zǒu chū de néng


  Iceland, officially the Republic of Iceland (Icelandic: Ísland or Lýðveldið Ísland (names of Iceland); IPA: [ˈliðvɛltɪθ ˈistlant]) is a country in northern Europe, comprising the island of Iceland and its outlying islets in the North Atlantic Ocean between the rest of Europe and Greenland. It is the least populous of the Nordic countries and the second smallest; it has a population of about 316,000 (April 1, 2008 estimate) and a total area of 103,000 km². Its capital and largest city is Reykjavík.
  
  Located on the Mid-Atlantic Ridge, Iceland is volcanically and geologically active on a large scale; this defines the landscape in various ways. The interior mainly consists of a plateau characterized by sand fields, mountains and glaciers, while many big glacial rivers flow to the sea through the lowlands. Warmed by the Gulf Stream, Iceland has a temperate climate relative to its latitude and provides a habitable environment and nature.
  
  The settlement of Iceland began in 874 when, according to Landnámabók, the Norwegian chieftain Ingólfur Arnarson became the first permanent Norwegian settler on the island. Others had visited the island earlier and stayed over winter. Over the next centuries, people of Nordic and Gaelic origin settled in Iceland. Until the twentieth century, the Icelandic population relied on fisheries and agriculture, and was from 1262 to 1918 a part of the Norwegian and later the Danish monarchies. In the twentieth century, Iceland's economy and welfare system developed quickly. In recent decades, Iceland has seen economic reforms, free trade in the European Economic Area, and diversification from fishing to new economic fields in services, finance, and various industries.
  
  Today, Iceland has some of the world's highest levels of economic freedoms as well as civil freedoms. As of 2007, Iceland is the most developed country in the world with fellow Nordic country Norway according to the Human Development Index and one of the most egalitarian, according to the calculation provided by the Gini coefficient. It is also the fourth most productive country per capita. Icelanders have a rich culture and heritage, like cuisine and poetry thus the country itself has many names coined by poets. Iceland is a member of the UN, NATO, EFTA, EEA and OECD, but not of the European Union. The country is a candidate for a non-permanent seat at the UN Security Council.
  
  Topography
  
  Strokkur, a geyser in the process of erupting. Lying on the Mid-Atlantic Ridge, Iceland is one of the most geologically active areas on Earth.Iceland is located in the North Atlantic Ocean just south of the Arctic Circle, which passes through the small island of Grímsey off Iceland's northern coast, but not through mainland Iceland. Unlike neighbouring Greenland, Iceland is considered to be a part of Europe, not of North America, though geologically the island belongs to both continents. Because of cultural, economic and linguistic similarities, Iceland in many contexts is also included in Scandinavia. The closest bodies of land are Greenland (287 km) and the Faroe Islands (420 km). The closest distance to the mainland of Europe is 970 km (to Norway).
  
  Iceland, as seen from space
  Iceland, as seen from space on January 29, 2004. Source: NASAIceland is the world's 18th largest island, and Europe's second largest island following Great Britain. The country is 103,000 km² (39,768.5 sq mi) in size, of which 62.7% is wasteland. Lakes and glaciers cover 14.3%; only 23% is vegetated. The largest lakes are Þórisvatn (Reservoir): 83–88 km² (32–34 sq mi) and Þingvallavatn: 82 km² (32 sq mi); other important lakes include Lögurinn and Mývatn. Öskjuvatn is the deepest lake at 220 m (722 ft).
  
  A map of Iceland with major towns marked.Many fjords punctuate its extensive coastline, which is also where most settlements are situated because the island's interior, the Highlands of Iceland, is a cold and uninhabitable combination of sand and mountains. The major towns are the capital Reykjavík, Kópavogur, Hafnarfjörður, Reykjanesbær, where the international airport is located, and Akureyri. The island of Grímsey on the Arctic Circle contains the northernmost habitation of Iceland.
  
  Iceland has four national parks: Jökulsárgljúfur National Park, Skaftafell National Park, Snæfellsjökull National Park, and Þingvellir National Park.
  
  Geological activity
  A geologically young land, Iceland is located on both the Iceland hotspot and the Mid-Atlantic Ridge, which runs right through it. This combined location means that geologically the island is extremely active, having many volcanoes, notably Hekla, Eldgjá, and Eldfell. The volcanic eruption of Laki in 1783–1784 caused a famine that killed nearly a quarter of the island's population; the eruption caused dust clouds and haze to appear over most of Europe and parts of Asia and Africa for several months after the eruption.
  
  There are also many geysers in Iceland, including Geysir, from which the English word is derived. With this widespread availability of geothermal power, and because many rivers and waterfalls are harnessed for hydroelectricity, most residents have hot water and home heat cheaply. The island itself is composed primarily of basalt, a low-silica lava associated with effusive volcanism like Hawaii. But Iceland has various kinds of volcanoes, many of which produce more evolved lavas such as rhyolite and andesite.
  
  Dettifoss, the most powerful waterfall in Europe, is located in north-eastern Iceland.Iceland controls Surtsey, one of the youngest islands in the world. It rose above the ocean in a series of volcanic eruptions between November 8, 1963 and June 5, 1968.
  
  Climate
  
  The climate of Iceland's coast is cold oceanic. The warm North Atlantic Current ensures generally higher annual temperatures than in most places of similar latitude in the world. The winters are mild and windy while the summers are damp and cool. Regions in the world with similar climate include the Aleutian Islands, Alaska Peninsula and Tierra del Fuego although these regions are closer to the equator. Despite its proximity to the Arctic, the island's coasts remain ice-free through the winter. Ice incursions are rare, the last having occurred on the north coast in 1969.
  
  There are some variations in the climate between different parts of the island. Very generally speaking, the south coast is warmer, wetter and windier than the north. Low-lying inland areas in the north are the most arid. Snowfall in winter is more common in the north than the south. The Central Highlands are the coldest part of the country.
  
  The highest air temperature recorded was 30.5 °C (86.9 °F) on 22 June 1939 at Teigarhorn on the south-eastern coast. The lowest was -38 °C (-36.4 °F) on 22 January 1918 at Grímsstaðir and Möðrudalur in the northeast hinterland. The temperature records for Reykjavík are 24.8 °C (76.6 °F) on 11 August 2004, and -24.5 °C (-12.1 °F) on 21 January 1918.
  
  Mean daily maximum and minimum temperatures (°C) (1961–1990) Location Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec All
  Reykjavík 1.9 2.8 3.2 5.7 9.4 11.7 13.3 13.0 10.1 6.8 3.4 2.2 High 7.0
  -3.0 -2.1 -2.0 0.4 3.6 6.7 8.3 7.9 5.0 2.2 -1.3 -2.8 Low 1.9
  Akureyri 0.9 1.7 2.1 5.4 9.5 13.2 14.5 13.9 9.9 5.9 2.6 1.3 High 6.7
  -5.5 -4.7 -4.2 -1.5 2.3 6.0 7.5 7.1 3.5 0.4 -3.5 -5.1 Low 0.2
  
  Flora and fauna
  
  An Icelandic sheepThe short time since the last ice age, 10,000 years ago, has mostly prevented plants and animals from migrating to the island or evolving locally. There are around 1,300 known species of insects in Iceland, which is rather low compared with other countries (about 925,000 are known in the world). The only native land mammal when humans arrived was the arctic fox, which came to the island at the end of the ice age, walking over the frozen sea. There are no native reptiles or amphibians on the island.
  
  Phytogeographically, Iceland belongs to the Arctic province of the Circumboreal Region within the Boreal Kingdom. According to the WWF, the territory of Iceland belongs to the ecoregion of Iceland boreal birch forests and alpine tundra. Approximately three-quarters of the island are barren of vegetation; plant life consists mainly of grassland which is regularly grazed by livestock. The only tree native to Iceland is the northern birch Betula pubescens, which formerly formed forest over much of southern Iceland. Permanent human settlement greatly disturbed the isolated ecosystem of thin, volcanic soils and limited species diversity. The forests were heavily exploited over the centuries for firewood and timber. Deforestation caused a loss of critical topsoil due to erosion, greatly reducing the ability of birches to grow back. Today, only a few small birch stands exist in isolated reserves. The planting of new forests has increased the number of trees, but does not compare to the original forests. Some of the planted forests include new foreign species.
  
  The animals of Iceland include the Icelandic sheep, cattle, and the sturdy Icelandic horse. Many varieties of fish live in the ocean waters surrounding Iceland, and the fishing industry is a main contributor to Iceland’s economy, accounting for more than half of its total exports. Wild mammals include the arctic fox, mink, mice, rats, rabbits and reindeer. Before and around the 1900s polar bears occasionally visited the island, traveling on icebergs from Greenland. Birds, especially sea birds, are a very important part of Iceland's animal life. Puffins, skuas, and kittiwakes nest on its sea cliffs. Though Iceland no longer has a commercial whaling fleet (as of August, 2007) it still allows scientific whale hunts, which are not supported by the Scientific Committee of the International Whaling Commission (IWC).
  
  History
  
  A 19th century depiction of a meeting of the Alþingi at Þingvellir.
  Age of settlement
  See also Settlement of Iceland and Icelandic Commonwealth.
  The first people thought to have inhabited Iceland were Irish monks or hermits who came in the eighth century, but left with the arrival of Norsemen, who systematically settled Iceland in the period circa AD 870-930. The first known permanent Norse settler was Ingólfur Arnarson, who built his homestead in Reykjavík in 874. Ingólfur was followed by many other emigrant settlers, largely Norsemen and their Irish slaves. By 930, most arable land had been claimed and the Althing, a legislative and judiciary parliament, was founded as the political hub of the Icelandic Commonwealth. Christianity was adopted in 1000. The Commonwealth lasted until 1262, when the political system devised by the original settlers proved unable to cope with the increasing power of Icelandic chieftains.
  
  Middle Ages to the Early Modern Era
  The internal struggles and civil strife of the Sturlung Era led to the signing of the Old Covenant, which brought Iceland under the Norwegian crown. Possession of Iceland passed to Denmark-Norway in the late 14th century when the kingdoms of Norway and Denmark were united in the Kalmar Union. In the ensuing centuries, Iceland became one of the poorest countries in Europe. Infertile soil, volcanic eruptions, and an unforgiving climate made for harsh life in a society whose subsistence depended almost entirely on agriculture. The Black Death swept Iceland in 1402–1404 and 1494–1495, each time killing approximately half the population.
  
  Jón Sigurðsson, leader of the Icelandic independence movementAround the middle of the 16th century, King Christian III of Denmark began to impose Lutheranism on all his subjects. The last Catholic bishop in Iceland was beheaded in 1550, and the country subsequently became fully Lutheran. Lutheranism has since remained the dominant religion. In the 1600s and 1700s, Denmark imposed harsh trade restrictions on Iceland, while pirates from England, Spain and Algeria raided its coasts. A great smallpox epidemic in the 18th century killed around one-third of the population. In 1783 the Laki volcano erupted, with devastating effects. The years following the eruption, known as the Mist Hardships (Icelandic: Móðuharðindin), saw the death of over half of all livestock in the country, with ensuing famine in which around a quarter of the population died.
  
  Independence and recent history
  In 1814, following the Napoleonic Wars, Denmark-Norway was broken up into two separate kingdoms via the Treaty of Kiel. Iceland remained a Danish dependency. A new independence movement arose under the leadership of Jón Sigurðsson, inspired by the romantic and nationalist ideologies of mainland Europe. In 1874, Denmark granted Iceland home rule, which was expanded in 1904. The Act of Union, an agreement with Denmark signed on December 1, 1918, recognized Iceland as a fully sovereign state under the Danish king. During the last quarter of the 19th century many Icelanders emigrated to North America, largely Canada, in search of better living conditions.
  
  Iceland during World War II joined Denmark in asserting neutrality. After the German occupation of Denmark on April 9, 1940, Iceland's parliament declared that the Icelandic government should assume the Danish king's authority and take control over foreign affairs and other matters previously handled by Denmark on behalf of Iceland. A month later, British military forces occupied Iceland, violating Icelandic neutrality. In 1941, responsibility for the occupation was taken over by the United States Army. Allied occupation of Iceland lasted throughout the war.
  
  On December 31, 1943 the Act of Union agreement expired after 25 years. Beginning on May 20, 1944, Icelanders voted in a four-day plebiscite on whether to terminate the union with Denmark and establish a republic. The vote was 97% in favor of ending the union and 95% in favor of the new republican constitution. Iceland formally became an independent republic on June 17, 1944, with Sveinn Björnsson as the first President. The Allied occupation force left in 1946. Iceland became a member of NATO on March 30, 1949, amid domestic controversy and riots and on May 5, 1951, a defense agreement was signed with the United States. American troops returned to Iceland and remained throughout the Cold War until autumn 2006.
  
  The immediate post-war period was followed by substantial economic growth, driven by industrialization of the fishing industry and Marshall aid and Keynesian government management of the economies of Europe, all of which promoted trade. The 1970s were marked by the Cod Wars – several disputes with the United Kingdom over Iceland's extension of its fishing limits. The economy was greatly diversified and liberalized following Iceland's joining of the European Economic Area in 1992.
  
  Government
  
  Iceland is a representative democracy and a parliamentary republic. The modern parliament, called "Alþingi" (English: Althing), was founded in 1845 as an advisory body to the Danish king. It was widely seen as a reestablishment of the assembly founded in 930 in the Commonwealth period and suspended in 1799. It currently has sixty-three members, each of whom is elected every four years.
  
  The president of Iceland is a largely ceremonial office that serves as a diplomat, figurehead and head of state, but who can also block a law voted by the parliament and put it to a national referendum. The current president is Ólafur Ragnar Grímsson. The head of government is the prime minister, who, together with the cabinet, takes care of the executive part of government. The cabinet is appointed by the president after general elections to Althing; however, this process is usually conducted by the leaders of the political parties, who decide among themselves after discussions which parties can form the cabinet and how its seats are to be distributed, under the condition that it has a majority support in Althing. Only when the party leaders are unable to reach a conclusion by themselves in reasonable time does the president exercise this power and appoint the cabinet himself. This has not happened since the republic was founded in 1944, but in 1942 the regent of the country (Sveinn Björnsson, who had been installed in that position by the Althing in 1941) did appoint a non-parliamentary government. The regent had, for all practical purposes, the position of a president, and Sveinn in fact became the country's first president in 1944.
  
  Stjórnarráðið, the seat of the executive branchThe governments of Iceland have almost always been coalitions with two or more parties involved, due to the fact that no single political party has received a majority of seats in Althing in the republic period. The extent of the political powers possessed by the office of the president is disputed by legal scholars in Iceland; several provisions of the constitution appear to give the president some important powers but other provisions and traditions suggest differently. In 1980, Icelanders elected Vigdís Finnbogadóttir as president, the world's first directly elected female head of state. She retired from office in 1996.
  
  Elections for the office of town councils, parliament and presidency are each held every four years. The next elections are scheduled for 2010, 2011 and 2008, respectively.
  
  Subdivisions
  
  The Althing in Reykjavík, with the cathedral on the left.Iceland is divided into regions, constituencies, counties, and municipalities. There are eight regions which are primarily used for statistical purposes; the district court jurisdictions also use an older version of this division. Until 2003, the constituencies for the parliament elections were the same as the regions, but by an amendment to the constitution, they were changed to the current six constituencies:
  
  Reykjavík North and Reykjavík South (city regions);
  Southwest (four geographically separate suburban areas around Reykjavík);
  Northwest and Northeast (north half of Iceland, split); and,
  South (south half of Iceland, excluding Reykjavík and suburbs).
  The redistricting change was made in order to balance the weight of different districts of the country, since a vote cast in the sparsely populated areas around the country would count much more than a vote cast in the Reykjavík city area. The imbalance between districts has been reduced by the new system, but still exists.
  
  Iceland's twenty-three counties are, for the most part, historical divisions. Currently, Iceland is split up among twenty-six magistrates (sýslumenn) that represent government in various capacities. Among their duties are tax collection, administering bankruptcy declarations, and performing civil marriages. After a police re-organization in 2007, which combined police forces in multiple counties, about half of them are in charge of police forces.
  
  There are seventy-nine municipalities in Iceland which govern local matters like schools, transportation and zoning. These are the actual second-level subdivisions of Iceland, as the constituencies have no relevance except in elections and for statistical purposes. Reykjavík is by far the most populous municipality, about four times more populous than Kópavogur, the second one.
  
  Politics
  
  Iceland has a left-right multi-party system. The biggest party is the right wing Independence Party (’’Sjálfstæðisflokkurinn’’), while the second largest one is the social democratic Alliance (‘’Samfylkingin’’). Following the May 2007 parliamentary elections, these two formed a coalition, enjoying a strong majority in Althing, with 43 out of 63 members supporting it.
  
  Other political parties that have a seat in Althing are the centrist Progressive Party (‘’Framsóknarflokkurinn’’), which had been in government with the Independence Party for 12 years before the 2007 election, the Left-Green Movement (‘’Vinstrihreyfingin - grænt framboð’’), founded in 1999, and the Centre-right Liberal Party. Many other parties exist on the municipal level, most of which only run locally in a single municipality.
  
  Foreign relations
  
  Iceland maintains diplomatic and commercial relations with practically all nations, but its ties with the Nordic countries, Germany, the US, and the other NATO nations are particularly close. Icelanders remain especially proud of the role Iceland played in hosting the historic 1986 Reagan-Gorbachev summit in Reykjavík, which set the stage for the end of the Cold War. Iceland's principal historical international disputes involved disagreements over fishing rights. Conflict with Britain led to a series of so-called Cod Wars in 1952-1956 as a result of the extension of Iceland's fishing zone from 3 to 4 nautical miles (6 to 7 km), 1958-1961 following a further extension to 12 nautical miles (22 km), 1972-1973 with another extension to 50 nautical miles (93 km) and in 1975-1976: another extension to 200 nautical miles (370 km).
  
  Iceland has no standing army. The U.S. Air Force maintained four to six Interceptors at the Keflavík base, until 30 September 2006 when they were withdrawn. Iceland supported the 2003 invasion of Iraq despite much controversy and condemnation in Iceland, deploying an Coast Guard EOD team to Iraq which was replaced later by members of the Icelandic Crisis Response Unit. Iceland has also participated in the ongoing conflict in Afghanistan and the 1999 bombing of Yugoslavia.
  
  Demographics
  
  Citizenship of Iceland residents (1.1.2008) Total 313,376
  Iceland 291,942
  Poland 8,488
  Lithuania 1,332
  Germany 984
  Denmark 966
  Portugal 890
  Philippines 743
  Ex-Yugoslavia 651
  United States 598
  Thailand 545
  Latvia 431
  United Kingdom 420
  Sweden 407
  China (PRC) 379
  Ex-Czechoslovakia 365
  Norway 301
  others 3,934
  total (without Icelanders) 21,434
  The original population of Iceland was of Nordic and Celtic origin. This is evident from literary evidence dating from the settlement period as well as from later scientific studies such as blood type and genetic analyses. One such genetics study has indicated that the majority of the male settlers were of Nordic origin while the majority of the women were of Celtic origin.
  
  Suburban Reykjavík. Over 60% of Icelanders live in the Reykjavík Metropolitan AreaIceland has extensive genealogical records dating back to the late 1600s and fragmentary records extending back to the Age of Settlement. The biopharmaceutical company deCODE Genetics has funded the creation of a genealogy database which attempts to cover all of Iceland's known inhabitants. It sees the database, called Íslendingabók, as a valuable tool for conducting research on genetic diseases, given the relative isolation of Iceland's population.
  
  The population of the island is believed to have varied from 40,000 to 60,000 in the period from initial settlement until the mid-19th century. During that time, cold winters, ashfall from volcanic eruptions, and bubonic plagues adversely affected the population several times. The first census was carried out in 1703 and revealed that the population was then 50,358. After the destructive volcanic eruptions of the Laki volcano during 1783–1784 the population reached a low of about 40,000. Improving living conditions have triggered a rapid increase in population since the mid-19th century - from about 60,000 in 1850 to 316,000 in 2008.
  
  In December 2007, 33,678 people (13.5% of the total population) who were living in Iceland had been born abroad, including children of Icelandic parents living abroad. 19,000 people (6% of the population) held foreign citizenship. Poles make up the far largest minority nationality (see table on the right for more details), and still form the bulk of the foreign workforce. About 9,000 Poles now live in Iceland, 1,500 of them in Reyðarfjörður where they make up 75 percent of the workforce who are building the Fjarðarál aluminium plant.. The recent surge in immigration has been credited to a labor shortage because of the booming economy while restrictions on the movement of people from the Eastern European countries that joined the EU/EEA in 2004 have been lifted. Large-scale construction projects in the east of Iceland (see Kárahnjúkar Hydropower Project) have also brought in many people whose stay is expected to be temporary.
  
  The south-west corner of Iceland is the most densely populated region. It is also the location of the capital Reykjavík, the northernmost capital in the world. The largest towns outside the greater Reykjavík area are Akureyri and Reykjanesbær, although the latter is relatively close to the capital.
  
  10 most populous towns in Iceland
  List of ten most populous towns in Iceland. The population census is April 1, 2008 (estimate).
  
  Reykjavík - 118,861
  Kópavogur - 30,000
  Hafnarfjörður - 25,107
  Akureyri - 17,304
  Reykjanesbær - 13,686
  Garðabær - 10.139
  Mosfellsbær - 8,317
  Árborg - 7,693
  Akranes - 6,419
  Fjarðabyggð - 5,000
  
  Language
  
  Iceland's official written and spoken language is Icelandic, a North Germanic language descended from Old Norse. It has changed less from Old Norse than the other Nordic languages, has preserved more verb and noun inflection, and has to a considerable extent developed new vocabulary based on native roots rather than borrowings from English. It is the only living language to retain the runic letter Þ. The closest living language to Icelandic is Faroese. In education, the use of Icelandic Sign Language for Iceland's deaf community is regulated by the National Curriculum Guide.
  
  English is widely spoken as a secondary language, and many Icelanders speak it at an almost native level. Danish is also widely understood. Studying both these languages is a mandatory part of the compulsory school curriculum. Other commonly spoken languages are German, Norwegian and Swedish. Danish is mostly spoken in a way largely comprehensible to Swedes and Norwegians – it is often referred to as "Scandinavian" in Iceland.
  
  In addition to Icelandic, many immigrants speak their respective native languages.
  
  Religion
  
  Icelanders enjoy freedom of religion under the constitution, though there is no separation of church and state. The National Church of Iceland, a Lutheran body, is the state church. The national registry keeps account of the religious affiliation of every Icelandic citizen. In 2005, Icelanders divided into religious groups as follows:
  
  82.1% members of the National Church of Iceland.
  4.7% members of the Free Lutheran Churches of Reykjavík and Hafnarfjörður.
  2.6% not members of any religious group.
  2.4% members of the Roman Catholic Church, which has a Diocese of Reykjavík (see also Bishop of Reykjavik (Catholic))
  5.5% members of unregistered religious organisations or with no specified religious affiliation
  The remaining 2.7% is mostly divided between around 20–25 other Christian denominations and sects, and less than 1% are in non-Christian religious organisations. The largest non-Christian denomination is Íslenska Ásatrúarfélagið, a neopagan group.
  
  Religious attendance is relatively low, as in other Nordic countries. The above statistics represent administrative membership of religious organizations and not the actual belief demographics of the population of Iceland.
  
  Economy and infrastructure
  
  Akureyri is the largest town in Iceland outside of the greater Reykjavík area. Most rural towns are based on the fishing industry, which provides 40% of Iceland's export.
  The Blue Lagoon,a geothermal spa located near Reykjavík.
  Gay parade in Iceland. Iceland has high economic liberties as well as civil liberties. Iceland is described as creative class hotspot by Richard Florida.Iceland is the fourth most productive country in the world by nominal gross domestic product per capita (54,858 USD), and the fifth most productive by GDP at purchasing power parity (40,112 USD). Except for its abundant hydro-electric and geothermal power, Iceland lacks natural resources; historically its economy depended heavily on the fishing industry, which still provides almost 40% of export earnings and employs 8% of the work force. The economy is vulnerable to declining fish stocks and drops in world prices for its main material exports: fish and fish products, aluminium, and ferrosilicon. Although the Icelandic economy still relies heavily on fishing, its importance is diminishing as the travel industry and other service, technology and various other industries grow. Economic growth slowed from 2000 to 2002, but the economy expanded by 4.3% in 2003 and 6.2% in 2004. The unemployment rate of ~1.0% (2007 est.) is among the lowest in the European Economic Area.
  
  Although Iceland is a very developed country, it is still one of the most newly-industrialized ones in Europe. Until the 20th century, it was probably the poorest country in Western Europe. The fast economic growth that it has experienced in the last decades is only recently allowing for upgrading of infrastructure such as transportation. The government coalition plans to continue its generally neo-liberal policies of reducing the budget and current account deficits, limiting foreign borrowing, containing inflation, revising agricultural and fishing policies, diversifying the economy, and privatising state-owned industries. The government remains opposed to EU membership, primarily because of Icelanders' concern about losing control over their fishing resources.
  
  Iceland's economy has been diversifying into manufacturing and service industries in the last decade, including software production, biotechnology, and financial services. The tourism sector is expanding, with the recent trends in ecotourism and whale-watching. Iceland's agriculture industry consists mainly of potatoes, turnips, green vegetables (in greenhouses), mutton and dairy products. The financial center is Borgartún in Reykjavik, hosting a large number of companies and three investment banks. Iceland's stock market, the Iceland Stock Exchange (ISE), was established in 1985.
  
  The primary currency of Iceland is the Icelandic Króna (ISK). Iceland's then foreign minister Valgerður Sverrisdóttir said in an interview on 15 January 2007 that she seriously wished to look into whether Iceland can join the Euro without being a member of the EU. She believes it is difficult to maintain an independent currency in a small economy on the open European market. An extensive poll, released on 11 September 2007, by Capacent Gallup showed that 53% of respondents were in favour of adopting the euro, 37% opposed and 10% undecided.
  
  Iceland ranked 5th in the Index of Economic Freedom 2006 and 14th in 2008. Iceland has a flat tax system. The main personal income tax rate is a flat 22.75 percent and combined with municipal taxes the total tax rate is not more than 35.72%, and there are many deductions. The corporate tax rate is a flat 18 percent, one of the lowest in the world. Other taxes include a value-added tax and a net wealth tax. Employment regulations are relatively flexible. Property rights are strong and Iceland is one of the few countries where they are applied to fishery management. Taxpayers pay various subsidies to each other, similar to European countries with welfare state, but the spending is less than in most European countries. Despite low tax rates, overall taxation and consumption is still much higher than countries such as Ireland. According to OECD, agricultural support is the highest among OECD countries and an impediment to structural change. Also, health care and education spending have relatively poor return by OECD measures. OECD Economic survey of Iceland 2008 highlights Iceland's challenges in currency and macroeconomic policy.
  
  Iceland is the most developed society in the world, ranked first on the United Nations’ Human Development Index. Icelanders are the second longest-living nation with a life expectancy at birth of 81.8 years. Iceland is one of the most egalitarian countries in the world, according to the calculation provided by the Gini coefficient.
  
  Transportation
  
  The social structure of Iceland is very dependent upon the personal automobile. Icelanders have one of the highest levels of cars per capita: on average one car per inhabitant older than 17 years,. Most Icelanders travel by car to work, school or other activities.
  
  The main mode of transport in Iceland is road. Iceland has 13,034 km of administered roads, of which 4,617 km are paved and 8,338 km are not. Until the second half of the 20th century, Iceland could only afford to pave roads near the biggest towns. Today, roads are being improved throughout the country and freeways are being built in and around Reykjavík. Iceland currently has no railways.
  
  Route 1 or the Ring Road (Icelandic: Þjóðvegur 1 or Hringvegur) is a main road in Iceland that runs around the island and connects all inhabited parts (the interior of the island is uninhabited). The road is 1339 km long (840 miles). It has one lane in each direction, except near larger towns and cities and in the Hvalfjörður Tunnel where it has more lanes. Most smaller bridges on it are single lane and made of wood and/or steel. Most of the road's length is paved with asphalt, but some stretches in the east still have a gravel surface.
  
  The main hub for international transportation is Keflavík International Airport, which serves Reykjavík and the country in general. It is 48km (30mi) to the west of Reykjavík. Domestic and regional flights to Greenland and the Faroe Islands operate out of Reykjavík Airport, which lies in the city centre. There are 86 airport runways in Iceland; most of them are unpaved and located in rural areas.
  
  The Nesjavellir Geothermal Power Plant services the Greater Reykjavík Area's hot water needs.
  Energy
  
  Renewable energy provides over 70% of the nation's primary energy. Over 99% of the country's electricity is produced from hydropower and geothermal energy, and the country expects to be energy-independent by 2050. Iceland's largest geothermal power plant is located in Nesjavellir, while the Kárahnjúkar dam will be the country's largest hydroelectric power plant.
  
  Yet, Icelanders still emit 10.0 tonnes of CO2 equivalent of greenhouse gasses per capita, higher than France or Spain. This is due to the wide use of personal transport. Iceland is the only country that has filling stations dispensing hydrogen fuel for cars powered by fuel cells. It is also one of only a few countries currently capable of producing hydrogen in adequate quantities at reasonable cost, because of Iceland's plentiful geothermal energy.
  
  A classroom in an Icelandic gymnasium.
  Education, science, and technology
  
  The Ministry of Education, Science and Culture is responsible for the policies and methods that schools must use, and they issue the National Curriculum Guidelines. However, the playschools and the primary and lower secondary schools are funded and administered by the municipalities.
  
  Nursery school or leikskóli, is non-compulsory education for children younger than six years, and is the first step in the education system. The current legislation concerning playschools was passed in 1994. They are also responsible for ensuring that the curriculum is suitable so as to make the transition into compulsory education as easy as possible.
  
  Compulsory education, or grunnskóli, comprises primary and lower secondary education, which often is conducted at the same institution. Education is mandatory by law for children aged from 6 to 16 years. The school year lasts nine months, and begins between 21 August and 1 September, ending between 31 May and 10 June. The minimum number of school days is 170, but after a new teachers’ wage contract, this will increase to 180. Lessons take place five days a week. The Programme for International Student Assessment, coordinated by the OECD, currently ranks the Icelandic secondary education as the 27th in the world, significantly below the OECD average.
  
  Upper secondary education or framhaldsskóli follows lower secondary education. These schools are also known as gymnasia in English. It is not compulsory, but everyone who has had a compulsory education has the right to upper secondary education. This stage of education is governed by the Upper Secondary School Act of 1996. All schools in Iceland are mixed sex schools.
  
  Iceland is a very technologically advanced society. By 1999, 82.3% of Icelanders had access to a computer. Iceland also had 1,007 mobile phone subscriptions per 1,000 people in 2006, the 16th highest in the world.
  
  Iceland is home to European Mars Analog Research Station.
  
  Culture
  
  Icelandic culture has its roots in Norse traditions. Icelandic literature is popular, in particular the sagas and eddas which were written around the time of the island’s settlement. Icelanders place relatively great importance on independence and self-sufficiency; in a European Commission public opinion analysis over 85% of Icelanders found independence to be "very important" contrasted with the EU25 average of 53%, and 47% for the Norwegians, and 49% for the Danes.
  
  Some traditional beliefs remain today; for example, some Icelanders either believe in elves or are unwilling to rule out their existence. Iceland ranks first on the Human Development Index, and was recently ranked the fourth happiest country in the world.
  
  An example from Brennu-Njáls saga. The sagas are a significant part of the Icelandic heritage.Iceland is liberal in terms of lesbian, gay bisexual and transgendered (LGBT) matters. In 1996, Parliament passed legislation to create registered partnerships for same-sex couples, covering nearly all the rights and benefits of marriage. In 2006, by unanimous vote of Parliament, further legislation was passed, granting same-sex couples the same rights as different-sex couples in adoption, parenting and assisted insemination treatment.
  
  Literature and the arts
  
  The poet Steinn Steinarr. by Einar Hákonarson.Iceland's best-known classical works of literature are the Icelanders' sagas, prose epics set in Iceland's age of settlement. The most famous of these include Njáls saga, about an epic blood feud, and Grœnlendinga saga and Eiríks saga, describing the discovery and settlement of Greenland and Vinland (modern Newfoundland). Egils saga, Laxdæla saga, Grettis saga, Gísla saga and Gunnlaugs saga ormstungu are also notable and popular Icelanders' sagas.
  
  A great translation of the Bible was published in the 16th century. Important compositions since the 15th to the 19th century include sacred verse, most famously the Passíusálmar of Hallgrímur Pétursson, and rímur, rhymed epic poems with alliterative verse that consist in two to four verses per stanza, popular until the end of the 19th century. In recent times, Iceland has produced many great writers, the best-known of which is arguably Halldór Laxness who received the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1955. Steinn Steinarr was an influential modernist poet.
  
  The distinctive rendition of the Icelandic landscape by its painters can be linked to nationalism and the movement to home rule and independence, which was very active in this period.
  
  Contemporary Icelandic painting is typically traced to the work of Þórarinn Þorláksson, who, following formal training in art in the 1890s in Copenhagen, returned to Iceland to paint and exhibit works from 1900 to his death in 1924, almost exclusively portraying the Icelandic landscape. Several other Icelandic men and women artists learned in Denmark Academy at that time, including Ásgrímur Jónsson, who together with Þórarinn created a distinctive portrayal of Iceland's landscape in a romantic naturalistic style. Other landscape artists quickly followed in the footsteps of Þórarinn and Ásgrímur. These included Jóhannes Kjarval and Júlíana Sveinsdóttir. Kjarval in particular is noted for the distinct techniques in the application of paint that he developed in a concerted effort to render the characteristic volcanic rock that dominates the Icelandic environment. Einar Hákonarson is an expressionistic and figurative painter who brought the figure back into Icelandic painting.
  
  Icelandic architecture draws from Scandinavian influences. The scarcity of native trees resulted in traditional houses being covered by grass and turf.
  
  Music
  
  Icelandic music is related to Nordic music, and includes vibrant folk and pop traditions, including medieval music group Voces Thules, alternative rock band The Sugarcubes, singers Björk and Emiliana Torrini; and Sigur Rós. The national anthem of Iceland is "Lofsöngur", written by Matthías Jochumsson, with music by Sveinbjörn Sveinbjörnsson .
  
  Björk is one of the most famous people from Iceland.Traditional Icelandic music is strongly religious. Hallgrímur Pétursson wrote many Protestant hymns in the 17th century. Icelandic music was modernized in the 19th century, when Magnús Stephensen brought pipe organs, which were followed by harmoniums.
  
  Other vital traditions of Icelandic music are epic alliterative and rhyming ballads called rímur. Rímur are epic tales, usually a cappella, which can be traced back to skaldic poetry, using complex metaphors and elaborate rhyme schemes. The best known rímur poet of the 19th century was Sigurður Breiðfjörð (1798-1846). A modern revitalization of the tradition began in 1929 with the formation of the organization Iðunn .
  
  Icelandic contemporary music consists of a big group of bands, ranging from pop-rock groups such as Bang Gang, Quarashi and Amiina to solo ballad singers like Bubbi Morthens, Megas and Björgvin Halldórsson. The indie-scene is also very strong in Iceland, bands such as Múm, Sigur Rós and the solo artist Mugison are fairly well-known outside Iceland.
  
  Many Icelandic artists and bands have had great success internationally, most notably Björk and Sigur Rós but also Quarashi, Ampop, Mínus and múm. The main music festival is arguably Iceland Airwaves, a yearly event on the Icelandic music scene, where Icelandic bands along with foreign ones occupy the clubs of Reykjavík for a week.
  
  "Icelandic rímur"
  
  A sample from a rímur cycle performed by Sigurd Bardarson on April 29, 1940 in Carmel, California'
  
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  Media
  
  Iceland’s largest television stations are the state-run Sjónvarpið and the privately owned Stöð 2 and Skjár einn. Smaller stations exist, many of them local. Radio is broadcast throughout the country, including some parts of the interior. The main radio stations are Rás 1, Rás 2 and Bylgjan. The daily newspapers are Morgunblaðið, Fréttablaðið and 24 stundir. Icelanders are a very technologically advanced nation and a large proportion of them keep a blog. The most popular websites are the news sites Vísir and Mbl.is.
  
  Iceland is home to the television station Nick Jr.'s animated program LazyTown (Icelandic: Latibær), a children's television program created by Magnús Scheving. It has become a very popular program for children and adults, and is shown in over 98 countries, including the UK, Canada, Sweden, the US and Latin America. The LazyTown Studios are located in Garðabær.
  
  The puffin is common, especially in the southern part of Iceland, and is a part of Iceland's traditional cuisine.
  Cuisine
  
  Most national Icelandic foods are based around fish, lamb and dairy products. Þorramatur is a national food consisting of many dishes and is usually consumed around the month of Þorri. Traditional dishes include skyr, cured ram scrota, cured shark, singed sheep heads and black pudding.
  
  The modern Icelandic diet is very diverse, and includes cuisines from all over the world. Like in other Western societies, fast food restaurants are widespread.
  
  Sports
  
  Sport is an important part of the Icelandic culture. The main traditional sport in Iceland is Glíma, a form of wrestling, thought to have originated in medieval times.
  
  Children and teenagers participate in various leisure activities. Popular sports are football, track and field, handball and basketball. Others are golf, tennis, swimming, chess and horseback riding on Icelandic horses. Team handball is often referred to as a national sport, Iceland's team is one of the top-ranked teams in the world, and Icelandic women are surprisingly good at football compared to the size of the country, the national team ranked the 18th best by FIFA. Iceland has excellent conditions for ice and rock climbing, although mountain climbing and hiking is preferred by the general public. Iceland also has the most Strongman competition wins.
  
  The oldest sport association in Iceland is the Reykjavik Shooting Association, founded 1867. Rifle shooting became very popular in the 19th century and was heavily encouraged by politicians and others pushing for Icelandic independence. Shooting remains popular and all types of shooting with small arms is practised in the country.
 

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