Iceland$37233$ - translation to german
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Iceland$37233$ - translation to german

GEOLOGIC HOTSPOT
Iceland plume; Iceland Hotspot
  • right

Iceland      
n. Island, Republik Island, große Insel am Atlantik; unabhängige Republik aus ISland und kleine Inseln bestehend
Icelandic citizen         
HISTORY AND REGULATIONS OF ICELANDIC CITIZENSHIP
Icelandic citizenship; Nationality law of Iceland; Icelandic citizen; Iceland nationality law; Iceland citizenship
Isländer
Environment Minister         
CABINET POSITION RESPONSIBLE FOR ENVIRONMENTAL CONSERVATION
Minister of the Environment; Minister of the environment; Minister for the Environment; Environment Minister; Minister for the Environment (disambiguation); Minister for the Environment of Iceland; Minister for Environment; Minister for the Environment and Natural Resources; Ministry for the Environment and Natural Resources; Environmental minister; Minister of environment
der Umweltminister

Definition

Iceland spar
·- A transparent variety of calcite, the best of which is obtained in Iceland. It is used for the prisms of the polariscope, because of its strong double refraction. ·cf. Calcite.

Wikipedia

Iceland hotspot

The Iceland hotspot is a hotspot which is partly responsible for the high volcanic activity which has formed the Iceland Plateau and the island of Iceland.

Iceland is one of the most active volcanic regions in the world, with eruptions occurring on average roughly every three years (in the 20th century there were 39 volcanic eruptions on and around Iceland). About a third of the basaltic lavas erupted in recorded history have been produced by Icelandic eruptions. Notable eruptions have included that of Eldgjá, a fissure of Katla, in 934 (the world's largest basaltic eruption ever witnessed), Laki in 1783 (the world's second largest), and several eruptions beneath ice caps, which have generated devastating glacial bursts, most recently in 2010 after the eruption of Eyjafjallajökull.

Iceland's location astride the Mid-Atlantic Ridge, where the Eurasian and North American Plates are moving apart, is partly responsible for this intense volcanic activity, but an additional cause is necessary to explain why Iceland is a substantial island while the rest of the ridge mostly consists of seamounts, with peaks below sea level.

As well as being a region of higher temperature than the surrounding mantle, it is believed to have a higher concentration of water. The presence of water in magma reduces the melting temperature, which may also play a role in enhancing Icelandic volcanism.