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The Icelandic Centre for Research (RANNÍS; Icelandic: Rannsóknamiðstöð Íslands) funds and promotes scientific research in Iceland. It formed in 2003 through an act of legislation. [2] [3] As of April 1 2022, the Ministry of Higher Education, Science and Innovation oversees its activities. [3]
Leibniz Centre for Tropical Marine Research in Bremen. ZMT; Max Planck Institute for Meteorology in Hamburg. MPI-M; Senckenberg by the Sea in Wilhelmshaven. Senckenberg am Meer [18] The Future Ocean, a collaborative research group based out of Kiel. University of Hamburg's Institute of Oceanography. IfM
China-Iceland Arctic Science Observatory(CIAO) [7] [8] Kárhóll, Iceland China Iceland 2018 Churchill Northern Studies Centre [9] (CNSC) Churchill, Manitoba Canada 1976 88 Czech Arctic Research Station [10] Longyearbyen and Petuniabukta, Svalbard, Norway Czech Republic 2014 4 2 Daneborg: Wollaston Foreland, Greenland Denmark 1944 12 Danmarkshavn
The Centre employees 10 full-time permanent staff members as well as hosting 50 members of staff for research and teaching. The University Centre operates distance learning for 100 students in the Westfjords region of Iceland as well as two master's degrees programs, them being Coastal and Marine Management and Marine Innovation.
The Arctic Fox Centre (Icelandic: Melrakkasetur [ˈmɛlˌrahkaˌsɛːtʏr̥]) is a research centre with an enclosed exhibition and café in the municipality Súðavík in the Westfjords in Iceland. It focuses on the Arctic fox ( Vulpes lagopus ) which is the only native terrestrial mammal in Iceland. [ 1 ]
The research projects are funded with Icelandic and international grants. The director of Keldur is Sigurður Ingvarsson (born 1956). Previous directors of Keldur are Björn Sigurðsson (born 1913, died 1959), Páll Agnar Pálsson (born 1919, died 2003), Guðmundur Georgsson, (born 1932, died 2010), Guðmundur Pétursson (born 1933).
Árnagarður, on the campus of the University of Iceland, which houses the institute. The Árni Magnússon Institute for Icelandic Studies (Icelandic: Stofnun Árna Magnússonar í íslenskum fræðum [ˈstɔpnʏn ˈau(r)tna ˈmaknusˌsɔːnar iː ˈistlɛnskʏm ˈfraiːðʏm]) is an institute of the Ministry of Education, Science and Culture of Iceland which conducts research in Icelandic and ...
Jón Atli received the Research Award of the Engineering Institute of the University of Iceland, in November 2006. He won first prize in the competition “Upp úr skúffunum 2004” (along with Einar Stefánsson and Þór Eysteinsson). [26] He received the Young Research Award of the Icelandic Centre for Research in 1997. [19]