Explore Iceland is an travel information center for foreign tourists. It provides travel information about the country, the population and the original icelandic culture. Explore Iceland is furthermore a booking center, a functional tool for travellers to fabricate the ideal vacation in Iceland. We receive commission from multitude of tour operators and agents that proffer diverse tours and activities of high quality. Our goal is to simplify the travel information retrieval for prospective visitors of Iceland by uniting in one data base all the best travels options and offers in icelandic tourist industry. Consequently you do not need to search/look any further, we fulfill all your travel needs.


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    Facts and statistics

    Country is an island of 103.000 km2 (39,756 sq.miles), with an average height of 500 m above sea level.  Its highest peak, Hvannadalshnjúkur, rises to 2.119 m and over 11 per cent of the country is covered by glaciers, including Vatnajökull, the largest in Europe.

    Energy
    Situated on the Mid-Atlantic Ridge, Iceland is a hot spot of volcanic and geothermal activity: 30 post-glacial volcanoes have erupted in the past two centuries, and natural hot water supplies much of the population with cheap, pollution-free heating.  Rivers, too, are harnessed to provide inexpensive hydroelectric power.

    People
    Out of a population numbering more than 280.000, half live in the capital Reykjavík and its neighbouring towns in the southwest.  Keflavík International Airport is located about 50 km from the capital.  The highland interior is uninhabited (and uninhabitable), and most centres of population are situated on the coast.

    Language
    Iceland was settled by Nordic people in the 9th century - tradition says that the first permanent settler was Ingólfur Arnarson, a Norwegian Viking who made his home where Reykjavík now stands.  The Icelanders still speak the language of the Vikings, although modern Icelandic has undergone changes of pronunciation and, of course, of vocabulary! Iceland is alone in upholding another Norse tradtion, i.e. the custom of using patronymics rather than surnames; and Icelander´s christian name is followed by his or her father´s name and the suffix -son or -dóttir, e.g. Guðrún Pétursdóttir (Guðrún, daughter of Pétur). Members of a family can therefore have many different "surnames", which sometimes causes confusion to foreigners!

    History
    In 930, the Icelandic settlers founded one of the world´s first republican governments; the Old Commonwealth Age, described in the classic Icelandic Sagas, lasted until 1262, when Iceland lost its independence, and in 1944 the present republic was founded.  The country is governed by the Althing (parliament), whose 63 members are elected every four years.  four-yearly elections are also held for the presidency; President Ólafur Ragnar Grímsson was elected in June 1996 to succeed Vigdís Finnbogadóttir, and was re-elected in June 2000.  The head of state plays no part in day-to-day politics.

    Economy
    The economy is heavily dependent upon fishing.  Despite effort to diversify, particularly into the travel industry, seafood exports continue to account for nearly three-puarters of merchandise exports and approximately half of all foreign exchange earnings.  Yet less than 10 per cent of the workforce is involved in fishing and fis processing. The travel industry makes up the second-largest export industry in Iceland.  The standard of living is high, with income per capita among the best in the world. The financial sector has benn liberalised in recent years.  The economy is service-oriented: two-thirds of the working population are employed in the service sector, both public and private.  Iceland is a member of the European Fee Trade Association (EFTA) and the European Economic Area (EEC).

    Health
    Life expectancy, at 81.3 years for women and 76.4 for men, is one of the highest in the world, and a comprehensive state health-care system aims to keep it that way