Best Attractions and Places to See in Tromso, Norway
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List of Best Things to do in Tromso,Norway
Jerez De La Frontera
Grotfjord
Tromso Botaniske Hage
Tromso Public library and City Archives
Tromso Tourist Information
Nordnorsk Kunstmuseum
Perspektivet Museum
Tromso Museum
The Polar Museum (Polarmuseet)
Northern Norwegian Science Center
TOP 40 TROMSO (NORWAY) Tourist Attractions (Things to Do)
Best places to visit in Tromso - Norway. Tromsø, the municipality in Troms county, lies in Northern Norway. Tromso is the third largest north of the Arctic Circle anywhere and the largest urban area in Northern Norway.
Things to do in Tromso is to visit beautiful and iconic places such as Fjellheisen Tromso, Tromso Fjords, The Polar Museum (Polarmuseet, Tromso Botaniske Hage (botanical garden), Polaria, Tromso Museum, Telegrafbukta Beach, Grotfjord and Northern Norwegian Science Center.
Other where to go list in Tromso is to go to Tromso Bridge, Prestvannet Lake, Tromso Public Library and City Archives, Nordnorsk Kunstmuseum, The Lyngen Alps, Tromso Domkirke (Cathedral), Macks Brewery (Macks Olbryggeri), Perspektivet Museum, Our Lady Catholic Church and Skansen.
Some must to visit places in Tromso are Profil Glassdesign, Tromso Jernbanestasjon, MS Polstjerna, Tromso Mini Zoo, Roald Amundsen Monument, Memorial of Deportation of Jews of Tromso, Jekta Storsenter, Lyngstuva, Charlottenlund Park and Elverhoy Kirke,
Other things to do or what to do list in Tromso is to visit Tromso Center for Contemporary Art, Galleri Nord, Tromsobadet KF, Krane Art Gallery, Lavhaugen Museum, Lone Slydahl, Graff Brygghus, Batvraket ved Tomasjordnes and Kastnes Bygdetun.
Thats all about tourist attractions in Tromso - Norway, total of 40 top beautiful places and things to do in Tromso by Explore Earth.
Tromso Museum - Aurora
Tromso Museum, Norway
Arctic Explorers - Skiing in Tromso, northern Norway.
Arctic adventures in Norway. Skiing in Norway on a perfect day for skiing.
For your own Arctic Adventures, please check out
See Whales, the Northern Lights, and Norway’s Pristine Beauty | Short Film Showcase
What a place to get away. Jeff Allen is a longtime sea kayaker who guides expeditions to his favorite place on Earth: northern Norway. The expedition starts in sea kayaks, paddling while surrounded by orcas and whales distracted by the herring rich waters; then moves to land, on sleds pulled by energetic dogs. It's a pleasure for Allen, since he knows that what the expeditioners will see will truly blow their minds. Filmed by Greg Dennis and with music by Chris Davey, this short documentary was shot during the blue time—the stretch of winter when the sun doesn't rise above the horizon.
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Northern Lights (Aurora Borealis) - Tromsø Norway Trip Part 4 - Malayalam Vlog
Northern Lights (Aurora Borealis), Everyone must see this magical phenomena once in a life...
നോർത്തേൺ ലൈറ്റ്സിനെക്കുറിച്ചു കേട്ടിട്ടുണ്ടോ? കേട്ടിട്ടില്ലെങ്കിലും ഒരുപക്ഷെ അതിൻെറ ഫോട്ടോ നിങ്ങൾ കണ്ടിട്ടുണ്ടാവും. ഈ വീഡിയോ നോർത്തേൺ ലൈറ്റ്സിനെകൂറിച്ചു കുറച്ചു കാര്യങ്ങൾ മനസിലാക്കാനും ഞങ്ങളുടെ നോർത്തേൺ ലൈറ്റ്സ് ചെയ്സിങ് എക്സ്പീരിയൻസ് കാണാനും സാധിക്കും.
Special Thanks to:
* National Oceanic And Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Space Weather Prediction Center
* Unsplash -
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വീഡിയോ ഇഷ്ടപ്പെട്ടുവെങ്കിൽ ചാനൽ സബ്സ്ക്രൈബ് ചെയ്യുക
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Tromsø ട്രിപ്പിന്റെ മുൻപുള്ള വീഡിയോസ് കാണാനായി താഴെ കാണുന്ന ലിങ്കിൽ ക്ലിക്ക് ചെയ്യുക.
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Thai museum at Nordkapp | Norway
KIng King Chulalongkorn of Siam visited Nordkapp in 1907. He came by boat via Copenhagen.
NASA's AZURE rockets create strange glowing clouds over Norway to study aurora - timelapse 4K
Last night (April 5th 2019) NASA's AZURE mission successfully launched 2 sounding rockets back-to-back from the Andøya Space Center in Norway. They released clouds of glowing tracers into the upper atmosphere (the background green is the real aurora though) to study and track the flow of neutral and charged particles in the ionosphere. Each dot is at a different altitude and notice they migrate at a different speed and direction!
I recorded everything on time-lapse from Senja island over the course of the evening on Canon 6D and Sigma 14mm f1.8.
More info about the mission:
For media inquiries contact nightlightsfilms@gmail.com
Soundtrack licensed through Epidemicsound, All visuals copyrighted Night Lights Films and may not be used without the author's authorization.
Nights in Tromsø
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Music: Dragon and Toast par Kevin MacLeod est distribué sous la licence Creative Commons Attribution (
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Black Vortex - Scoring Action par Kevin MacLeod est distribué sous la licence Creative Commons Attribution (
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Tromso University, Norway, timelapse
EGU GIFT2016: The Sun
Geosciences Information For Teachers workshop presentation by Pål Brekke (Norwegian Space Center, Oslo, Norway) at the 2016 General Assembly of the European Geosciences Union. The 2016 GIFT Workshop, was titled The Solar System and Beyond. (Credit: EGU/Luca Mariani, lucamariani.me)
The EGU Committee on Education has organised Geosciences Information For Teachers (GIFT, Workshops since 2003. These are two-and-a-half-day teacher enhancement workshops held in conjunction with EGU's annual General Assembly. There, selected top-level scientists working in the Earth Sciences offer the invited teachers talks centered on a different theme every year.
The main objective of the GIFT workshops is to spread first-hand scientific information to science teachers of primary and secondary schools, significantly shortening the time between discovery and textbook, and to provide the teachers with material that can be directly transported to the classroom. In addition, the full immersion of science teachers in a truly scientific context (EGU General Assemblies) and the direct contact with world-leading geoscientists are expected to stimulate curiosity towards scientific research that the teachers then transmit to their pupils.
The use of GIFT videos is allowed exclusively for educational purposes.
The Future of the Arctic: A New Source of Riches, The Sønsteby/Whist Lecture by Dr. Olav Orheim
The Future of the Arctic: A New Source of Riches
The Sønsteby/Whist Lecture by Dr. Olav Orheim
Thursday, January 10, 2013, 6:30 pm
Scandinavia House: The Nordic Center in America
New York, NY
Distinguished Norwegian Polar expert Dr. Olav Orheim will highlight the drivers behind the rapid changes now taking place in the Arctic. An emerging race for raw materials, combined with climate change giving access to the Arctic Ocean, has lifted the High North on the global political agenda, and has brought in new players, including China.
About Dr. Olav Orheim
Dr. Olav Orheim is a distinguished Norwegian polar expert, who has been deeply involved in Arctic affairs from the Cold War period to the present. His career includes Professor at University of Bergen and director of the Norwegian Polar Institute from 1993 to 2005. From 2005 to 2012, he was in charge of International Polar Year activities at the Research Council of Norway.
About Gunnar Sønsteby
As the chief of operations in the Norwegian Resistance Movement during the German occupation in Norway during World War II, Gunnar Sønsteby (1918--2012) — also known as Kjakan (The Chin) and No. 24 — saved countless lives and went on to become his country's most highly decorated citizen. Following the war, he lived and studied in the United States before returning to Norway in 1955. His book, Report from No. 24, chronicling his wartime activities, was published in 1960.
Mr. Sønsteby's visionary support helped to establish Norway's Resistance Museum in Oslo, which ensures that his and future generations will remember the struggle the Norwegians fought on their own soil during a time of foreign occupation. He spent many years giving lectures at schools, universities, civic organizations, and cultural institutions around the world, including more than 200 lectures in the U.S.
He was decorated by the governments of Great Britain and the United States; in 2008, he became the first non-American to receive the Special Operations Medal. He was awarded the ASF Cultural Award in 2001 in recognition of his efforts to advance the understanding and appreciation in the United States of the challenges confronted and resistance efforts undertaken by the Norwegian people in World War II.
This lecture was presented as a tribute to the memory of Norwegian Resistance hero and 2001 ASF Cultural Award Winner Gunnar Sønsteby. It has been made possible by the Sønsteby/Whist Fund of The American-Scandinavian Foundation, which was established in 1998 by ASF Trustee Andrew Whist in honor of Mr. Sønsteby.
Tromso Weather
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Tromso the city where you cannot predict the weather.
When someone told me that you can't trust the weather in Tromso I wasn't sure what to think. This is an example of how quickly the weather can change! 754 images over 20 mins on the evening of March 5, 2019. It was snowing prior to the the start of this timelapse and cleared for a small period of time!
Next time you want to watch the Aurora in Tromso, just wait 20 mins it will clear for you! :)
3TaoPaTiew: 14D in Norway, Ep11(D2) Viking Ship Museum,Oslo
The Viking Ship Museum presents Viking ship discoveries from Gokstad, Oseberg and Tune as well as other finds from Viking tombs around the Oslo Fjord.
The museum displays the world's two best-preserved wooden Viking ships built in the 9th century, as well as small boats, sledges, a cart with exceptional ornamentation, implements, tools, harness, textiles and household utensils
The Arctic Circle 66 Degrees North in Norway
This Video was taken when stopping at the Arctic Circle in norway (2005). the Arctic Circle starts at 66 Degress North
NORTHERN LIGHTS - MALAYALI EXPLORING IN TROMSØ SVALBARD LONGYEARBYEN NORWAY MALAYALAM VLOG
#norwaymalayalam #northernlights #firsttimeinmalayalam
NORTHERN LIGHTS CHASING TROMÖ SVALBARD LONGYEARBYEN SPITZBERGEN FIRST TIME IN MALAYALAM VLOG
The bright dancing lights of the aurora are actually collisions between electrically charged particles from the sun that enter the earth's atmosphere. The lights are seen above the magnetic poles of the northern and southern hemispheres. Auroral displays appear in many colours although pale green and pink are the most common. Shades of red, yellow, green, blue, and violet have been reported. The lights appear in many forms from patches or scattered clouds of light to streamers, arcs, rippling curtains or shooting rays that light up the sky with an eerie glow.
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LET'S CONNECT
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മറ്റുള്ള വീഡിയോ കാണാൻ ഈ ലിങ്കിൽ കുത്തുക
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ഐസ് ചുരണ്ടണ വീഡിയോ
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The film made with:
Sony FDR-AX53,
GoPro HERO6 Black,
Rode videomicro
Editing with Sony Vegas Movie Studio Platinum 15
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Shooting location :
Tromsø Cable Car
Tromso Wilderness Center
Camp Barentz
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A Long Cold
Yiddish Sadness
Down With That by Twin Musicom is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (
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Sami people celebrate their national holiday
(9 Feb 2010)
Alta (Finnmark), Norway - February 6, 2010
1. Wide shot of fiord
2. Mid shot of town
4. Mid shot of city centre
5. Mid shot of reindeers being prepared for a race
6. Various of race
8. Cutaway to Sami woman
9. SOUNDBITE: (Sami) Marianne Eiva Olsen, voxpop
I am very proud of being a Sami. And today we celebrate our day because we are not able to express ourselves through our language and culture.
Kautokeino, February 7, 2010
10. Wide shot of village
11. Mid shot of parish church
12. Various shots of village centre
13. Exterior shot of hostel
14. Various shots of hostel owner talking to guest and neighbour
15. SOUNDBITE: (Sami) Jinga Hermansen Hatter, owner of local hostel
Things have changed so much since my youth. Now communications and infrastructure are modern. And also we have educational centres in the region. Not like in my childhood that I had to travel many miles to go to school.
16. Various shots of hostel owner chatting with reindeer shepherd
17. Mid shot of shepherd leaving hostel
18. Wide shot of car driving through countryside
19. Various shots of shepherd arriving at home
20. Various of shepherd taking care of reindeer
21. SOUNDBITE: (Sami) Nils Peder Gaup, reindeer shepherd and business entrepreneur
I am proud of being a Sami. And I am not worried about the future generations of Sami not choosing to become a shepherd. Even though they get better education these days we will have reindeer shepherds for the next couple of centuries.
21. Mid shot of shepherd entering home
22. Various shots of children playing computer game
23. SOUNDBITE : (Sami) Isaat Gaup, student
When I am out of school I spend my time like any other child. Playing with my computer, playing soccer outside or on top of my snow mobile. But when it comes to my future I want to become a shepherd like my dad.
24. Various shots of youngsters driving their snow mobiles over frozen lake
25. SOUNDBITE: (Sami) , high school student
When I finish high school I want to move to Alta or Tromso and become a trained carpenter. We haven''t got a lot of opportunities over here so is better to move to the big cities in the area.
26. Wide shot of Sami University College
27. Set up shots of Kamil Ozerk, professor of political science
28. SOUNDBITE: (English) Kamil Ozerk, professor of political science
Of course globalisation and maybe Norway''s membership in the European Union could create some challenges or problems for this indigenous people. Because they are only 40,000 (Sami) in this country. And there are a total of 100,000 in this area, Sweden, Finland and Russia. But Sami people must be heard and taken in consideration.
29. Wide shot of house
30. Various shots of designer tailor sewing typical Sami dress
31. SOUNDBITE: (Sami) Risten Ravdna Gaup Haetta, tailor
Fabric designs for our dresses were mainly imported from the rest of Europe. And the designs they made for us were not exactly our own style. So I started to manufacture my designs locally. Authentic Sami designs.
32. Various shots of tailor
LEAD IN
The Sami people of Europe''s Arctic have been celebrating their national day.
The once-oppressed indigenous reindeer herders in northern Norway, Sweden, Finland and northwestern Russia began marking February 6 as their national day in 1993.
The date marks the first Sami national congress, when about 100 herders gathered in Trondheim, Norway, in 1917.
STORYLINE
The Sami country, or Sapmi, is situated in the cold tundra of northern Scandinavia.
Their territory comprises of four countries: Norway, Finland, Sweden and Russia.
Scientists believe that they descended from the Komsa people, a prehistoric society that occupied the area as long as nine or ten thousand years ago.
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Globe Trekker Series 4 - Norway Trailer
Interested in more information? Follow this link to find out everything you need to know!
Ian Wright begins his Nordic journey high on a cliff in Stavanger, where he witnesses the extreme sport of Base Jumping. He journeys from Staveanger to Bergen by ferry, which takes him along just 150 of Norway’s 21,000 miles of coastline. Ian enjoys a night out with locals and travellers in Bergen and discovers that drinking in Norway requires a small mortgage.
The next stage of the journey is from Bergen to Voss by train. The usually highly reliable train breaks down and a taxi is the next best thing. On arrival in Voss a night under canvass at the edge of a clear clean lake and river proves uncomfortable. Morning comes and aches and pains are forgotten as Ian takes on nature with a lesson in river boarding. After that, what better than a sheep’s head and a communal vessel of Viking beer?!
Ian travels onwards to Stryn, one of Norway’ three summer ski resorts. The journey takes two days by coach and Ian has the opportunity to see Norway’s mountainscapes at their best, as well as take a short trip in a replica Viking boat. Ian has a go at a telemark skiing – a traditional form of skiing that combines downhill and cross country styles. To help him recover, he takes a quick sauna.
Three hundred miles further north by bus to Tronheim, Ian rents a bike and takes a whistle stop tour of the town. He then travels by train to Lapland, the land of the Midnight Sun. The end of the line comes 330 miles short of Tromso in a town called Bodo, so Ian has to take a flight the rest of the way.
Lapland is also known as Samiland and it covers parts of Sweden, Russia and Finland. Ian thumbs a lift from a Sami Reindeer farmer and soon finds himself erecting a Norwegian Labu or tent. This is followed by the staple diet of dried reindeer meat which seems to be the one and only food eaten by the Sami people for breakfast, lunch and dinner.
Ian is invited to a colourful Sami wedding and feast – made up of eighteen reindeer! To raise the funds for the final leg of his journey Ian dons wellies, hat and white overalls for three days of fish gutting.
The final part of Ian’s journey takes him by helicopter to Spitzbergen, the Northern most point of Norway, and a town called New Orlesund. With a greater population of polar bears than humans, this island is the closest stretch of land to the North Pole. The temperatures are way below freezing and the opportunity of ice diving with some resident researchers is to good to pass. Ian finds himself harvesting seaweed in the name of science.
The ultimate challenge of Ian’s Norwegian journey comes in the form of eight huskies and a sled which take Ian deep into the wilderness.
VORTEX in the Sky
Gigantic spiraling vortexes appear in the skies of Norway and Sweden. Are they alien or ufo based? Are they some weird portal?...completely unexplainable.
In the early hours of December 9th, 2009, thousands of people in northern Norway and Sweden were roused from their beds by concerned family and friends, to witness an incredible celestial event. Some were just curious about the unusual light display, others were frightened for their lives when they saw the massive white spiral with the blue tail, growing at immense speed, with what appeared to be a black hole at the center.
There had recently been serious concerns raised about atom testing at the nearby large hadron collider in Switzerland, that could potentially generate a black hole capable of swallowing the Earth. Some speculated it could be ionosphere testing by EISCAT in Tromso, the Norwegian version of Alaska's HAARP program. Others observed the tunnel-like appearance of the phenomenon and thought it was a wormhole in space, opened by extraterrestrials.
Media outlets and police switchboards were flooded with reports of the event. Government officials scrambled to confirm a reasonable explanation, and were quick to suggest a Russian missile test, which Russia quickly denied, and then, strangely, changed their story, just 24 hrs later. Russia suddenly claimed it was a test of their new forty foot Bulava missile gone wrong.
A rare and embarrassing admission for Russia to make, but also one that didn't quite make sense. There were no reports of the sighting from Russia or Finland closest to the alleged test site in the White Sea, and, analysis of video footage reveals a spiral 150 miles wide.
Just what could these things be? Could a missle really continually spin around in perfectly circles to as to make a vortex such as this?...and if so…why were they testing missles over populated areas anyway?
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