The answer really depends on the season Iceland is in. There is no exact count for each season cause the days change. It is different from where people who for example live in Texas. During the winter some days it can be rare to see sunlight. In the summer it's the exact opposite. There could be 24 hours of sunlight one day. That commonly happens in Alaska as well.
Different from place to place but most of the times ranges from 8-10 of sunlight.
Nil in mid-winter, 24 per day in mid-summer.
during winter it is 6 hours of sunlight
the taiga receives almost no sunlight it the winter and little in the summer
it varies but we get about 8 hours daylight in winter extending to about 16 hours in summer
September is the beginning of autumn. During the month of September, London sees an average of five hours of sunlight.
winter and spring both have sunlight
12 hours of sunlight and 12 hours of darkness
the average hours of daylight in the the winter are 11 for Hawaii
Zero
96 hours of sunlight occurs in the winter day.....
during winter it is 6 hours of sunlight
The minimum (around December 21) is 10 hours and 11 minutes.
i think its 20
In summer generally, there are 24 hours of daylight; in winter there are generally zero hours of daylight.
20 Hours in the summer, 6 hours in the winter
Winter - 10 hours Summer - 13 hours
the taiga receives almost no sunlight it the winter and little in the summer
Summer, maximum at 22 June: ca. 15 h Winter, minimum at 22 December: ca. 9 h