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Travel in Iceland

Destinations South Coast

Destinations and interesting sites on the south coast of Iceland

Aerial view of Dyrhólaey
South coast

Dyrhólaey Island in south iceland

Due to the breathtaking view from the headland and rich birdlife Dyrhólaey is a very popular destination on the south coast of Iceland. From the cape you have view on a good day out to Westman Island and even Surtsey in the south and over towards Eyjafjallajökull in the west and Mýrdalsjökull in the North. On the east side you have Reynisfjara black sand beach, Mt. Reynisfjall and Reynisdrangar.

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Eruption in Eyjafjallajokull glacier and volcano in april 2010
South coast

Eyjafjallajökull glacier and volcano on the south coast of Iceland

Eyjafjallajokull is located north of Skogar, and to the west of Myrdalsjokull glacier and the massive volcano there; Katla, at the borders of the South Icelandic highlands. Two glacier outlets ( crawling glaciers ) fall from Eyjafjallajökull to the north, down to the plain.The front one (western) Gígjökull or Falljökull and the inner one is called Steinsholtsjökul

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Reynisdrangar basalt columns at sunset on black sand beach in Iceland
South coast

Reynisdrangar sea stacks on the south coast of Iceland

The Reynisdrangar sea stacks are home to thousands of nesting seabirds as well as the cliffs near by. The summer air is filled with wings flapping and birds flying out at see to fish for their young ones. Species that can be found here include Puffins, Arctic tern, Fulmars, Seagulls and Guillemots, making it a interesting location for all birdwatchers out there.

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Large waves at black sand beach on the south coast of Iceland
South coast

Reynisfjara black sand beach

At Iceland’s southernmost point, the black sand beach at Reynisfjara is one of the most beautiful beaches in Iceland.  With its enormous basalt stacks, roaring Atlantic waves, flying puffins and stunning panoramas, Black Beach is widely considered to be the most beautiful example of Iceland’s black sand beaches

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Aurora borealis over Seljalandsfoss waterfall on the south coast of Iceland
South coast

Seljalandsfoss waterfall on the south coast of Iceland

The waterfall Seljalandsfoss on the south coast of Iceland is probably one of Icelands best known waterfalls and only the great Gullfoss waterfall is possibly more frequently visited. This is because the waterfall is one of only few waterfalls in iceland that you can walk behind.

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Northern lights over Skogafoss waterfall on south coast of Iceland
South coast

Skogafoss waterfall on the south coast of Iceland

Skogafoss waterfall situated on the Skoga River in the south of Iceland, is one of the biggest waterfalls in the country with a width of 25 metres (82 feet) and a drop of 62 m (203 ft) of the cliffs of the former coastline. It is the last in row of waterfalls that stem from the passage of Fimvorduhals that erupted in march 2010.

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Sólheimajökull glacier on south coast of Iceland in winter
South coast

Sólheimajökull glacier in south coast of Iceland

Solheimajokull glacier is an approximately 11km long and 200m – 300m thick and 46 sqkm outlet glacier, which advances from Myrdalsjokull glacier. Sólheimajökull retreated by 973 meters (0.6 miles) from 2000-2015. In the years 2017 – 2018 the glacier retreated 100m. If the climate continues to warm, there is a possibility that the glaciers will have virtually disappeared in 100 to 200 years. “It is among the highest losses on the Earth,” says pioneering glaciologist Helgi Bjornsson

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Douglas C-117 Plane wreck on Sólheimasandur and Mýrdalsjökull on south coast of Iceland
South coast

The story of DC3 or C-117 plane wreck on Sólheimasandur in Iceland

People have been told that the wreck is of a Douglas DC3, and so it states in most all popular blogs that can be found about the airplane. Some tell that it in deed is a Douglas DC3 Special, specially built for the US navy as a cargo plane. But the truth is different. The worlds most famous DC3 wreck that is sitting on top of its grave in a post-apocalyptic surrounding of vast sand dunes brought down to Sólheimasandur by glacial flooding is in fact a converted Douglas C-117.

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Vík í mýrdal
South coast

Vik I Myrdal

Bordered by the glacial river Jökulsá to the west and the river Blautakvísl to the east Vik is the only seaside settlement in Iceland left without a harbour due to the nature of the coastline extended and formed by frequent eruption in the subglacial volcano Katla that sits under Mýrdalsjökull, the forth largest glacier in Iceland (700 km2) and marks the north borders of Vík.

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