The official announcement and condolences have been made on the death of the 700-year-old Oke Jokeul, or Ice Glacier, in Iceland.
It was officially celebrated in 2014, when it was first revealed that the Ice Oak Jokeul glacier had died in Iceland.
It is the first glacier to be lost to Iceland due to human activity and climate change.
The fact that a gassilayer has died is confirmed by the fact that it can no longer move.
This is when the glacier is no longer present and the glacier is no longer present.
The celebration was held at the top of the volcano, Oke.
Due to the closure of the volcano Oke, the glacier is called Oke Jokul, but it is still called Oke Volcano after 700 years.
A plaque was opened in Iceland to mark the future of Jokul’s loss.
Icelanders and environmental experts hope that by installing this plaque, they will be able to protect glaciers that are being lost to the world, and to inform the future.
The first Icelandic glacier to be named a glacier is Oke Jokeul, the inscription reads.
The plaque further states that in the next 200 years, the rest of the world’s major glaciers will have the same fate.