Iceland review - 2012, Side 88

Iceland review - 2012, Side 88
86 ICELAND REVIEW the weather rePort Only once has the temperature reached more than 30°C (86°F) in Iceland. That happened on June 22, 1939, at the farm Teigarhorn, close to the village of Djúpivogur in East Iceland. The record is 30.5°C (87°F), to be exact. The Reykjavík heat record was set on August 11, 2004, at 25°C (77°F). The record cold in Iceland happened at Grímsstaðir á Fjöllum, on January 21,1918—minus 38°C (-36.4°F).  The strongest wind ever recorded in Iceland occurred on January 16, 1995, at 74.5 meters/second (268 kilometers/hour or 166 miles/hour) at Mt. Gagnheiði, near Egilsstaðir, in East Iceland. The strongest wind ever in Reykjavík was recorded on January 15, 1942, at 39.8 m/s (143 km/h or 89 m/h). The record rainfall for one day hap- pened on January 10, 2002, ten years ago, at the farm Kvísker, in southeast Iceland. On that single day, 293.2 millimeters of rain fell, that is 293 liters of water on every square meter of land. The wet- test place in Iceland is Reyðarfjörd fjord, in the East Fjords. In November 2002, the precipitation there was 971.5 mm. The record for one month in Reykjavík is 259.7 mm, from November 1993. PS the long and winding roadS the distances from Reykjavík’s city center: Akranes 49 km / 30 miles Akureyri 388 km / 241 miles Arnarstapi (Snæfellsnes peninsula) 192 km / 119 miles ásbyrgi 508 km / 316 miles Bjargtangar (Europe’s western-most point) 433 km / 269 miles geysir 106 km / 66 miles Mývatn 487 km / 303 miles egilsstaðir 674 km / 419 miles Keflavík International Airport 49 km / 31 miles Höfn in Hornafjörður 458 km / 285 miles ísafjörður 455 km / 283 miles langisjór 242 km / 150 miles neskaupstaður 715 km / 444 miles Raufarhöfn 574 km / 357 miles Siglufjörður 386 km / 240 miles vík 186 km / 116 miles PS Sara, anna and arnar It looks as if names in Iceland are beginning to show the effects of mul- ticultural immigration and globalism. According to Statistics Iceland, the top fifteen names registered for boys aged 0 to 4 years old in 2008 were: Jón, Daníel, Aron, Viktor, Alexander, Arnar, Guðmundur, Gabríel, Kristján, Tómas, Stefán, Magnús, Sigurður, Mikael, and Ísak. The names Daníel, Aron, Viktor and Alexander were much lower on the list of all men’s names in 2007 (num- bers 24, 37, 63, and 57), and the names Gabríel, Mikael, and Ísak were not on the list of the top 100 names at all. The same is true for female names. The top fifteen names for girls aged 0 to 4 years old in 2008 were: Sara, Anna, Emilía, Katrín, Eva, María, Guðrún, Kristín, Margrét, Júlía, Helga, Telma, Viktoría, Rakel, and Aníta. In 2007, among all female names, Sara ranked number 39, Eva 22 and Rakel 45, while Emilía, Júlía, Telma, Viktoría, and Aníta were not on the list at all. It seems that the old Icelandic names, such as Hrafnhildur, Þorbjörg, Sigurlaug, Þorsteinn, Haukur, Guðjón, and many others that tend to be long and difficult to pronounce—less amenable to global usage perhaps—are being used less and less. AS F a c t s & F i g u r e s f&f

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