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Scandinavia is a region kind of, not a country, so it does not have a capital city. It consists of the countries of Denmark, Norway, Sweden and Finland but also Iceland! Each of those have their own capital citues. Denmark's is Copenhagen. Norway's is Oslo. Sweden's is Stockholm. Finland's is Helsinki. Iceland's is Reykjavik.
Scandinavia is a region kind of, not a country, so it does not have a capital city. It consists of the countries of Denmark, Norway, Sweden and Finland but also Iceland! Each of those have their own capital citues. Denmark's is Copenhagen. Norway's is Oslo. Sweden's is Stockholm. Finland's is Helsinki. Iceland's is Reykjavik.
Scandinavia is a region kind of, not a country, so it does not have a capital city. It consists of the countries of Denmark, Norway, Sweden and Finland but also Iceland! Each of those have their own capital citues. Denmark's is Copenhagen. Norway's is Oslo. Sweden's is Stockholm. Finland's is Helsinki. Iceland's is Reykjavik.
Neighboring countries are: Russia, Norway and Sweden. The principal coasts are on the arms of the Baltic Sea : the Gulf of Bothnia to the west and the Gulf of Finland to the south (borders on Estonia). If you mean what kind of land is there, then it is mostly wooded regions and the coastal areas.
The taiga covers most of Finland, Alaska, Canada, Sweden, Finland, Norway and Russia, as well as parts of the extreme northern continental United States. In addition, it also covers northern Kazakhstan and Japan. Therefore, its inhabitants would include peoples of those countries.For the source and more detailed information concerning this subject, click on the related links section (Answers.com) indicated below this answer box.
It's complicated, but Norway and Sweden are friends and belong side by side like a hand inside a glove. Typicality, a Swede in Norway or the other way around; will not be looked upon like a foreigner. This is because the countries are so equal, and the people in it of course. The same goes for Denmark too, Norway-Denmark-Sweden, Scandinavia in other words, are all very good friends. If a Norwegian breaks his leg in Denmark, he will get patched up in a Danish hospital, and vice versa. However - There are two things that Norwegians and Swedes got against each other. The biggest issue is that Sweden was neutral during the war, Swedes where not too popular in Norway in the recent post-WW2 times. Then some culture developed where Norwegians make fun of Swedes, and in Sweden it's the other way around. Those jokes still persist. In Norway you usually earn about 20% more than in Sweden, so often Swedish students try to get work across the border. Those Swedes are called "party-swedes" and are often being looked down upon by Norwegians. Probably because Norwegians became too posh after the oil and forgot how to party hard.
Northern, southern, eastern and western Norway.
My guess for the coldest place in Europe if you are to include Russia west of the Ural mountains would be anywhere in its wilderness in the north heading towards Murmansk and the Kola Peninsula. If we are not including Russia then My guess is probably Finland in its interior or Sweden. On the whole Sweden and Finland are colder than Norway at sea level but there are some high altitude zones in eastern Norway that are exceptionally cold in winter, particularly the Hardangervidda plateau and the Finnsmarvidda in the far north. For me anywhere that you travel from the Finnsmarkvidda in northern Norway eastwards towards Kiruna in arctic Sweden is certainly cold enough in winter, I know because I have been there
Norway use their own money, Norske kroner
yes! people in Norway have all sortes of pets.
injurious climate
Acid rain.