Norway is the last country in the world.

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Norway is the last country in the world. It is believed that the Earth ends here. This country is situated near the North Pole. The North Pole is the place where the Earth rotates on its axis. This country is very beautiful but you will be surprised to know that there is night here. In the Wave Fest City of Northern Norway, the sun sets only for 40 minutes. While in some countries of the world, the temperature during summer days is between 50 degrees, in summer the temperature here remains zero degrees. In winter the temperature here is – Goes below 45 degrees. After reaching here, you will feel a different world. Due to being close to the North Pole, there is no night or morning every day like in other countries, but here there is day for six months and night for six months. During summer days, the sun is not even visible here, whereas during summer days, the sun never sets, which means there is no night here during summer days. Norway is a northern European nation that is located on the Scandinavian Peninsula’s western side. The far south of the country, particularly the area surrounding Oslo, the capital, is home to about half of the nation’s population. Norway is mostly mountainous, with around 50,000 islands carved out by deep glacial fjords off its heavily indented coastline.
Approximately 6,000 years ago, Indo-European peoples made a permanent settlement close to the current capital of Oslo, Norway’s coast. Due to the country’s harsh climate and rugged terrain, the interior was more sparsely populated; today, the majority of people live in coastal cities like Trondheim and Bergen. During the Viking era, when Norse warriors regularly raided the British Isles, the coasts of western Europe, and even the interior of Russia, early Norwegians developed a seafaring tradition based on fishing and farming. The Vikings also established colonies in Iceland and Greenland and explored the coast of North America, which Leif Eriksson named Vinland, more than a thousand years ago. Men like Fridtjof Nansen, Roald Amundsen, and Thor Heyerdahl are examples of the great tradition of exploration that has persisted into contemporary times, thanks to the efforts of explorers like Leif Erikkson and his father, Erik the Red. The Norwegian people, who were weakened by the plague and economic decline in the late Middle Ages and were under the influence of Sweden and Denmark, traded fish and lumber. As a result, modern Norway, which attained independence in 1905, became a significant global maritime transporter of goods and a pioneer in the construction of specialized ships.

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