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February 22 | A Sense of Snow (IRB)
ingibjorg2Snow is snow is snow. One way of coping with it is to try to ignore it, but I think we should play with it more.  more

 
thorrablot-slideshowClick on the picture to watch an audio slideshow of Þorrablót, an Icelandic mid-winter feast. In the past there was no fresh food available at this time of year so people ate dried fish, smoked lamb, putrefied shark and soured blood and liver pudding along with other soured meat products—ram testicles included.  more
Fjallabyggd (“Mountain Settlement”) is a skier’s dream. Its slopes are perfect for slaloming and there are also tracks for telemark skiing. Winter sporting enthusiasts can also go ice skating or rent snowmobiles. In summer, Fjallabyggd turns into a paradise for hikers. Read this special promotion about one of Iceland’s best hidden gems.  more
MOST READ

22.07.2009 | 12:29

Killer Whales Change Communication Frequencies

Killer whales have been changing the frequency of their communication sounds due to substantial boat traffic in their habitat. Ruv.is reports this.

Whales off the coast of Iceland. Copyright: Icelandic Photo Agency.

These findings are among the results of foreign scientists who are currently researching killer whales off the coast of the Westman Islands.

The research has been ongoing in the past few weeks. It is a collaboration between The University of Iceland and universities in Scotland and Japan. The research began at the Westman Islands last year. Then, high frequency sounds that the killer whales use for communicating, were recorded.

Last year, the scientists discovered that the killer whales can give away sounds to up to 40 kilohertz, but the human ear can only detect sounds up to 20 kilohertz. One of the scientists’ goals is to determine how far apart the killer whales can be, and still communicate.



 
Comment    

February 22 | (Not) Breaking News

sigmundurdavidgunnlaugsson_althingiA Playboy model, Progressive Party in trouble and a bad hair day.

  more
stockexchange_pkSeven companies have asked to be listed on the NASDAQ OMX in Reykjavík, in one of the biggest privatization plans in the country’s history. All seven companies are owned, at least in part, by Landsbanki Íslands, which the Government of Iceland owns 81 percent.  more
karahnjukar_psLandsvirkjun accounts for 75 percent of total electricity production in Iceland; in the year 2010 production reached 12,625 GWh.  Climate change and the resulting increase in temperatures are expected to lead to a significant increase in the flow of glacial rivers in the years to come.  more
kaupthinghead_ipa-sjoThe Special Prosecutors’ Office has filed charges in the so-called Al-Thani case, which pertains to the purchase of a five percent share in Kaupthing Bank in late September 2008, merely two weeks before the banking system’s collapse.  more





February 21 | Some Other News

February 21 | Today is Bursting Day!


February 20 | Missing Noses Found




February 20 | Today is Bun Day!

February 19 | Today is Women's Day!



 
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ir0411-coverThe current issue of the quarterly magazine Iceland Review includes for example an interview with world-renowned fashion designer Steinunn Sigurðardóttir as well as features on the successful biotech company ORF Genetics and the hot debate regarding the EU. If you subscribe now, you will receive a photo book by IR editor, photographer Páll Stefánsson of the eruptions in Eyjafjallajökull as a gift. Click here to subscribe to the magazine and here to buy a gift subscription.  more



REVIEWS
February 20 | Crime Gone Bad
pressa-coverThe second series of The Press continues to follow the life of journalist, mother and wife Lára and her investigation of Iceland’s underground world.  more
orfHarvesting human-like protein from genetically modified barley, Icelandic company ORF Genetics is revolutionizing the world of green biotechnology. With Iceland’s First Lady Dorrit Moussaieff and Hollywood stars among its loyal fans, the company’s phenomenal skincare range has, quite literally, changed the face of the cosmetics industry.  more
snoehetta-kjarvalsstadirThe international recognition that the architecture firm Snøhetta has received is quite unique in a Norwegian context.   more
Click for Reykjavik, Iceland Forecast 




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