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120 Iceland Trivia Questions, Answers, and Fun Facts

How much do you know about Iceland? This category is for trivia questions and answers related to Iceland (Geography). Each one is filled with fun facts and interesting information.
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1 What is the name of the Norwegian who is recognised as the first settler in Iceland?
Answer: Ingolfur Arnarson

Ingólfur Arnarson originally came ashore at the point on the south coast now known as Ingolfshofdi (Ingolf's Head). However, he declined to settle there, preferring to throw his family totem poles into the sea and found his settlement where they were washed up - in what is now Reykjavik.
  From Quiz: The Land of Fire and Ice
2 Vulcanologists believe the volcanoes of Iceland exist because the island is on top of what?
Answer: Both of these

Most of the world's volcanoes are found along ocean ridges where tectonic plates are separating, or where tectonic plates are colliding. Relatively few are found at hotspots, where plumes of molten rock rise from the mantle - which can be anywhere, even in the middle of a tectonic plate, like Hawaii. Iceland is on the mid-Atlantic ridge, and thought to be on a hotspot as well, which explains why this is one of the most volcanically active places on Earth.
  From Quiz: Fire and Ice - the Volcanoes of Iceland
3 What is the descriptive name of Iceland?
Answer: "The Land of Ice and Fire"

Iceland is often called "The Land of Ice and Fire" because it has volcanoes and geysers set in a bleak landscapes of ice fields and glaciers.
  From Quiz: Let's Tour Iceland!
4 What is the climate of Iceland's coastal regions?
Answer: Cold oceanic

The majority of Icelanders live by or near the coast. The average temperature for July is 10-13°C, although there are often warmer spells. The North Atlantic current keeps Iceland's climate relatively temperate and thus habitable.
  From Quiz: Iceland - Way Up North
5 What is Iceland's legislative assembly called?
Answer: the Althing

It was established in 930 and is called the oldest surviving legislative assembly in the world.
  From Quiz: Everything You Didn't Know About Iceland
6 What is the native language of Iceland?
Answer: Icelandic

Icelandic comes from old Norse, with a few added characters of their own.
  From Quiz: Incredible Iceland
7 The amazing Hallgrimskirkja parish church stands above the city of Reykjavik. In which century was it constructed?
Answer: The Twentieth

Guðjón Samúelsson is said to have designed he Hallgrímskirkja to resemble the basalt lava flows which are typical of the country. Hallgrímskirkja is a Lutheran church.
    Your options: [ The Nineteenth ] [ The Seventeenth ] [ The Twentieth ] [ The Eighteenth ]
  From Quiz: The Land of Fire and Ice
8 What do you call the rocks that rise from the shallow waters of Lake Myvatn in Northern Iceland?
Answer: Black Rocks

Black rocks rise from the shallow waters of Lake Myvatn in Northern Iceland. They were formed from the cooled lava of an ancient volcano.
  From Quiz: Let's Tour Iceland!
9 The beaches on the Reykjanes peninsula, where the international airport is, are beautiful yellow sand. If you went further east around the south coast what colour would the beaches be?
Answer: black

The beaches are black due to the layers of volcanic ash covering all the area from the many eruptions of Hekla and other active volcanoes in the vicinity. If you have time to get out to Dyrholaey, the most southerly point of mainland Iceland, there are wonderful photo opportunities here of basalt cliffs, sea arches and sea caves.
You can see black beaches at Eyrarbakki and Stokkseyri just south of Selfoss, within easy reach of Reykjavik, but no basalt cliffs!
  From Quiz: Iceland for Tourists
10 Architecturally, Iceland is a young nation. In the centre of the capital city there is a tall church which is considered a landmark by the city's inhabitants. What is the name of this church?
Answer: Hallgrimskirkja

Hallgrimskirkja was constructed in the years 1945-1986 and takes its name from 17th century poet Hallgrimur Petursson, Iceland's most prolific writer of psalms.
    Your options: [ Perlan ] [ Landakotskirkja ] [ Thingvellir ] [ Hallgrimskirkja ]
  From Quiz: Iceland - Way Up North
11 In what year was Christianity officially adopted in Iceland?
Answer: 1000

1000 marked a big year for Iceland, because not only did they adopt Christianity, but they did it peacefully, without a big fight.
  From Quiz: More Incredible Iceland
12 From which two European countries did Iceland's first documented settlers come?
Answer: Norway and Ireland

This is where they got their old Norse from. Also, the Icelanders adopted the Norse way of last names: taking the first name of your father and putting either son or daughter respectively after it. For example: Erikson (Erik's son)
Many sources acknowledge that Irish monks were the first to settle Iceland in the century prior to Viking settlement. The Vikings drove the monks out in order to claim the island.
    Your options: [ Sweden and France ] [ Germany and Ireland ] [ Denmark and Greece ] [ Norway and Ireland ]
  From Quiz: Incredible Iceland
13 What is the currency in Iceland?
Answer: Icelandic Crown

In common with Sweden and Norway, the Icelanders use crowns (króna) as their national currency. The modern Icelandic króna was established in 1981.
  From Quiz: The Land of Fire and Ice
14 What is the highest point in Iceland?
Answer: Hvannadalshnukur

The Hvannadalshnukur is a peak in the north-western rim of the Orafajokull volcano in Iceland, and is the highest point of the island. Its height is 2,109.6 metres.
  From Quiz: Let's Tour Iceland!
15 Iceland has gone down in the history books for being the first nation to democratically elect a female head of state. What was that president's name?
Answer: Vigdis Finnbogadottir

Vigdis Finnbogadottir was elected president in 1980 and stayed in office for a full four terms, until her retirement in 1996 when Olafur Ragnar Grimsson was elected. Born in Reykjavik in 1930, Vigdis had previously worked in education, tourism and theatre. Since retiring from the presidency she has been extensively involved with matters of culture and welfare, both in Iceland and on an international level.
  From Quiz: Iceland - Way Up North
16 What percent of Iceland's exports of goods is made up of fish and fish products?
Answer: 70%

Due to the warm Gulf Stream that rises up towards Iceland, there are places that make for great feeding grounds for fish, so fish is a really big part of their economy.
  From Quiz: More Incredible Iceland
17 In what century did the first settlers come?
Answer: 9th

Iceland has some of the best kept accounts of the Viking sagas from around that time period.
  From Quiz: Incredible Iceland
18 On 17 June 1944, Iceland proclaimed its independence and finally broke away from which country?
Answer: Denmark

Back in the 13th century, Iceland became a part of Norway. Later, when Norway joined forces with Denmark in 1814, the Danes took over Iceland. On December 1, 1918 Denmark officially recognised that Iceland was a "sovereign state", but the date the Icelanders celebrate as being that of their independence is actually 25 years later, during the occupation of Denmark by Nazi Germany.
    Your options: [ Sweden ] [ Norway ] [ Denmark ] [ Finland ]
  From Quiz: The Land of Fire and Ice
19 A tuya is an unusual type of extinct volcanic cone found in Iceland, formed when lava erupted through thick ice. What is distinctive about the shape of a tuya?
Answer: It has a flat top and steep sides

A tuya looks a bit like an inverted cupcake, and is formed when lava erupts through an ice sheet or glacier. The name actually comes from Tuya Butte, in the far north of British Colombia in Canada, where a number of tuyas were formed as volcanoes broke through the ice sheet that covered North America during the Pleistocene. Herðubreið and Hlöðufell in Iceland are tuyas that also formed during the Pleistocene, erupting under the thick ice.
  From Quiz: Fire and Ice - the Volcanoes of Iceland
20 What offshore island was created by volcanic activity in the year 1963?
Answer: Surtsey Island

As recently as 1963, volcanic activity created a new offshore island, Surtsey, as lava bubbled up from the ocean floor. Its name comes from the word Surtr, which means a fire jotunn or giant from Norse mythology.

  From Quiz: Let's Tour Iceland!
21 In the south east of Iceland most of the hot water and power is provided by which environmentally acceptable means?
Answer: Geothermal springs

The many geothermal springs in this area are well able to supply hot water and power to the area. In Deildartunguhver 180 litres of boiling water bubbles from the ground every second. This is piped to towns in the southeast. It takes 24 hrs for the water to reach Akranes and in the winter will lose 37 degrees Fahrenheit. Other geothermal springs are used to heat greenhouses in Hveragerdi where most of Iceland's vegetables and fruit are grown. You can generally tell if the hot water comes direct from geothermal springs as the water has a sulphurous smell.
Icelanders enjoy swimming and almost every town has a geothermally heated pool which can be used all the year round.

The most famous geothermal pool is the Blue Lagoon near the International Airport. This is not a natural pool but has been constructed as a leisure centre and uses geothermally heated water which has already been used to generate electricity at a nearby power plant. This is a real must for tourists, although I hear it gets a bit crowded in the summer months - not in February though, when the outside temperature is -10C, then it is great!
    Your options: [ Wind Power ] [ Geothermal springs ] [ Wave power ] [ Hydroelectric power ]
  From Quiz: Iceland for Tourists
22 In Iceland, if my father's name was Tom, and I was a boy, what would my last name be?
Answer: Tomsson

In Iceland, they use the traditional way of their people, they take their father's first name and place 'son' or 'dottir' after the name.
  From Quiz: More Incredible Iceland
23 Iceland has what type of government?
Answer: constitutional republic

Its constitution was signed June 16, 1944 when it achieved independence from Denmark.
  From Quiz: Everything You Didn't Know About Iceland
24 What is the approximate area of Iceland?
Answer: 103,000 sq km

Iceland may be fairly large, but there are only three people (on average) per square km.
  From Quiz: Incredible Iceland
25 Many Icelandic place names end in "-foss". What natural feature would you expect to find in these places?
Answer: A waterfall

Some places which have spectacular waterfalls are simply called "Foss", but perhaps the most famous waterfall is at Gulfoss, part of the Golden Circle. One waterfall I visited in Iceland was Hundafoss - the Dog Falls, so called because this is where the farmers' dogs used to get regularly swept down over the falls into the deep pools beneath them, when their masters were crossing the river. The dogs would then simply jump out, shake themselves off and trot home.
  From Quiz: The Land of Fire and Ice
26 About how many of the Icelandic volcanoes have had an eruption (some of them several times) from the settlement of Iceland in 874 AD to 2010 AD?
Answer: 18

There are over 130 volcanic mountains on Iceland, 18 of which have erupted since the island was first settled - some of them as many as twenty times - to 2010. It is thought that Icelandic volcanoes have produced a third of the world's total lava output over the last 500 years.
  From Quiz: Fire and Ice - the Volcanoes of Iceland
27 What waterfall is located on the river of Jokulsa a Fjollum?
Answer: Dettifoss Falls

Dettifoss Falls is located in Jokulsargljufur National Park of Northeast Iceland. With a flow of about 500 cubic meters per second at high flow, this waterfall is 44m tall and 100m wide.


.
  From Quiz: Let's Tour Iceland!
28 In 1995, Iceland was twice hit by the same sort of natural disaster which claimed numerous lives and left the country deeply affected. What kind of natural disaster was this?
Answer: Avalanche

In the early hours of January 16, 1995, an avalanche fell on 15 houses in the small village of Sudavik in the western fjords, claiming 14 lives in total. Several months later, in late October, an avalanche fell on another village in the west, Flateyri, killing 20 men, women and children. In a country with a population of less than 300,000, this was an immense blow.
    Your options: [ Flooding ] [ Hurricane ] [ Famine ] [ Avalanche ]
  From Quiz: Iceland - Way Up North
29 What colours are used in Iceland's flag?
Answer: red, white and blue

The flag is blue with a red cross extending to the flag's ends, with the vertical section of the cross shifted to the left. The red cross is outlined in white. The white is snow, and the red stands for volcanoes. The blue either stands for mountains, the sea, or the sky.
  From Quiz: Everything You Didn't Know About Iceland
30 What is the capital of Iceland?
Answer: Reykjavik

Vatnajokull is a glacier and Breidamerkurjokull is a southern outlet.
  From Quiz: Incredible Iceland
31 Iceland has about 18 "active" volcanoes - that is to say, volcanoes which have erupted since the land was settled in 871 AD (+/-2). The one called Eyjafjallajokull erupted in 2010. Its name does not actually mean volcano; what does "jokull" mean?
Answer: Glacier

Glaciers cover around 11% of Iceland. The largest glacier in Iceland is Vatnajökull in the southeastern part of the country. The highest point of Eyjafjallajökull is 1666 metres above sea level.
    Your options: [ Lava ] [ Spring ] [ Glacier ] [ Mountain ]
  From Quiz: The Land of Fire and Ice
32 Reykjavik is the capital of Iceland, and is located in the southwestern part of the island. What city is located in the southeastern part of the Iceland?
Answer: Hofn City

Hofn is an Icelandic fishery town in the southeastern part of the country. The island tour bus stops there about three times a day. The tour starts at Vatnajokull glacier.
  From Quiz: Let's Tour Iceland!
33 The river Hvita has an enormous waterfall on it called Gullfoss. In 1920 plans were made to dam the river, which would have ruined the waterfall. What was planned for the river?
Answer: Hydroelectric power plant

Yes this amazing waterfall was going to fall to hydroelectric power production. There were not many people living in the area at that time, and the government may not have been aware of how beautiful the falls were. Permission was granted for foreign investors to go ahead.
Sigridur and her father Tomas Tomasson, the land owners, walked to Reykjavik (over 130 kilometres!) to put their case to rescue Gullfoss. Fortunately they won and Gullfoss was safe. Sigridur is considered Iceland's first tourist guide as she took many tourists to the falls. The falls are now owned by the nation. You may have guessed that foss is Icelandic for waterfall. If you haven't seen this fabulous sight check it out on Wikipedia, there are some good photos there.
    Your options: [ Salmon fishing site ] [ Hydroelectric power plant ] [ Sailing centre ] [ Aluminium smelting plant ]
  From Quiz: Iceland for Tourists
34 What is the full official name of Iceland in Icelandic?
Answer: Lýðveldið Ísland

This translates as The Republic of Iceland.
  From Quiz: Iceland - Way Up North
35 Iceland boasts the oldest functioning parliament, the Althingi. How many members, though, does it hold?
Answer: 63

The Althingi was formed in 930 A.D.
  From Quiz: More Incredible Iceland
36 In the year 2006, about how many people were estimated to live in Iceland?
Answer: almost 300,000

About 93% of these people live in urban areas of the country.
  From Quiz: Everything You Didn't Know About Iceland
37 What does Reykjavik mean?
Answer: Smoky Bay

Reykjavik has a population of approximately 108,000 people.
  From Quiz: Incredible Iceland
38 "Bláa Lónið" is a popular tourist attraction on the Reykjanes Peninsula. What could you expect to do there?
Answer: Bathe

"Bláa Lónið" is better known as the Blue Lagoon and is a spa where the workers have to cool the water down before it is safe for visitors to bathe in it. It is just south of Keflavik, the airport for Reykjavik.
  From Quiz: The Land of Fire and Ice
39 A volcanic fissure on a mountain called Laki opened in 1783, spewing forth a basaltic lava flow and clouds of ash and toxic fumes. What were the main poisonous gases in those toxic fumes?
Answer: Sulphur dioxide and hydrogen fluoride

Sulphur dioxide is the main gas causing that acrid odour noticed around geothermal areas. Laki erupted for eight months, generating more lava than any other Icelandic eruption in the last 500 years. The toxic gases from Laki killed half of Iceland's livestock, leading to the deaths of a quarter of the inhabitants. The clouds of sulphur dioxide and ash rolled across Europe as a thick and deadly haze, killing thousands of people and animals. It entered the upper atmosphere of the Northern Hemisphere, resulting in freak weather conditions. There was a severe winter across North America, causing the Mississippi to freeze over at New Orleans! There was crop failure and famine to Japan, drought in India, and famine in Egypt. It became arguably the deadliest volcanic eruption in historic times, resulting in the deaths of over two million people around the world.
  From Quiz: Fire and Ice - the Volcanoes of Iceland
40 What colors are found in the flag of Iceland?
Answer: red, white, and blue

The colors you can see on the flag of Iceland are red, blue, and white. The colors correspond to lava (red), mountains (blue), and ice (white).

(Worldflags101 Website)
  From Quiz: Let's Tour Iceland!
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