Kaldbaksbotnur is a village on the island of Streymoy in the Faroe Islands.

Kaldbaksbotnur
Village
Kaldbaksbotnur
Kaldbaksbotnur
Kaldbaksbotnur is located in Denmark Faroe Islands
Kaldbaksbotnur
Kaldbaksbotnur
Location in the Faroe Islands
Coordinates: 62°3′58″N 6°54′45″W / 62.06611°N 6.91250°W / 62.06611; -6.91250
State Kingdom of Denmark
Country Faroe Islands
IslandStreymoy
MunicipalityTórshavn Municipality
Population
 (1 January 2006)
 • Total7
Time zoneGMT
 • Summer (DST)UTC+1 (EST)
Postal code
FO 185
ClimateCfc

Geography edit

 
Kaldbaksbotnur, a close-up view

Kaldbaksbotnur is located on the east coast of Streymoy. The village consists two farms. One farm is located in the bottom of Kaldbaksfjørður on the western side of the river and this farm is also called Northern part of Sund. The other is on the eastern side of the river and relates to Kaldbak. When the road to Tórshavn opened in 1980 this connected both Kaldbaksbotnur and Kaldbak to the island's road network.

In 1992 the 2816m tunnel Kollfjarðartunnilin was opened from Kaldbaksbotnur to Kollafjørður[1] and this is now the main route from Tórshavn to the villages in the north of the island.[2]

Throughout the 1990s Kaldbaksbotnur was served by bus route 4 operated by the blue Bygdaleiðir country buses which passed through the village on their route from Tórshavn to Kaldbak. Route 5, added in 2001, also ran from Tórshavn through Kaldbaksbotnur to the township of Kollafjørður. Since 2003, route 4 is running to Kollafjørður, while route 5 is running to Kaldbak.[3] Both operate several times per day.

There is a Danish Navy base in the mountains above Kaldbaksbotnur in a valley called Mjørkadalur (Fog Valley). On the top of the mountains there is a NATO early-warning radar system.[2]

Geology edit

A sample of stalagmitic white Mordenite (Na2CaK2)Al2Si10O24·7H2O) from Kaldbaksbotnur was collected by Volker Betz and can be seen at http://www.mindat.org/photo-177823.html[4]

Kaldbaksbotnur in music edit

Kaldbaksbotnur is referred to in a song Útsetin performed by Teitur Lassen on his 2007 album Káta Hornið.[5] It is performed in the Faroese language but the extract below (the 3rd and 4th verses out of eight) includes an English translation:

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "List of tunnels by location". The MyMetroworld. 2007. Archived from the original on 2008-10-29. Retrieved 2008-12-06.
  2. ^ a b Jón Fossá. "Kaldbaksbotnur". Faroeislands.dk - All villages on the Faroe Islands. Retrieved 2008-12-06.
  3. ^ Peter Roberts (2008). "BUSSLEIÐIN - The Tórshavn city bus network". Countrybus. Retrieved 2008-12-06.
  4. ^ Volker Betz (2006). "Mordenite". mindat.org. Retrieved 2008-12-06.
  5. ^ Teitur Lassen (2007). "Útisetin". Teitur. Archived from the original on October 24, 2008. Retrieved 2009-01-02.

External links edit