Iceland and Britain engaged in a series of conflicts known as the Cod Wars. |
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Rather than comply, Britain began having warships escort its trawlers. While most of the confrontations that followed amounted to little more than saber-rattling — vessels ramming one another, warning shots being fired into the crisp, cold air — what the U.K. called "the first casualty of the cod war" occurred in 1975 when a fisherman from Grimsby, England, was injured by a cable that an Icelandic trawler severed. It was actually the second casualty, however, as an Icelandic engineer was killed in 1973. It was also the last: The resulting diplomatic talks ended with the U.K. accepting Iceland's 200-mile EEZ, bringing the decades-long conflict to an end. | |
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There's an app in Iceland that prevents people from dating their relatives. | |||||||||
With a population of around just 376,000, nearly 60% of which is clustered in or near the capital city of Reykjavík, Iceland is not a large country. It's also a historically homogenous one, which is why Sad Engineers Studios created the Íslendinga-App to prevent people from accidentally dating distant relatives. Drawing on a database with more than 1,200 years of genealogical information, it allows users to bump their phones and see if they might be (kissing) cousins — a feature known as "Sifjaspellsspillir," or "Incest Spoiler." The app's slogan, fittingly enough, is "Bump the app before you bump in bed." spawned an assortment of movies, TV shows, plays, and Halloween costumes. | |||||||||
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