Time Zone |
Europe/Oslo |
Standard Time GMT / UTC |
UTC+1 |
Daylight Saving Time |
UTC+2 |
Time Zone |
Pacific/Port_Moresby |
Standard Time GMT / UTC |
UTC+10 |
Daylight Saving Time |
Daylight saving time is not observed in the current region. |
Moss is a coastal city in the county of Eastfjord in southeastern Norway, located on the eastern shore of the Oslofjord, about 60 kilometers from the capital city of Oslo. As an important industrial and port city, Moss is known for its long history of paper making and shipbuilding, which dates back to the Middle Ages. The city's name "Moss" means "marshland" in Old Norwegian, reflecting its geography.
As one of Norway's pioneering industrial cities, with its famous Moss Verft shipyard and paper industry, Masi was the site of the landmark Convention of Masi in 1814, which laid the foundations for the Norwegian-Swedish alliance. Today, the city has been gradually transformed into a modern industrial center, while retaining a large number of 19th-century industrial buildings, creating a unique cultural landscape.
The city is surrounded by fjords, forests and lakes, and the island of Jeløya, which is connected to the main city by a bridge, is a popular recreational area. Cultural facilities such as the Masci Art Museum and the Museum of Industrial Workers illustrate the city's history. The annual Moss Jazz festival attracts many visitors and reflects the city's vibrant arts scene.
As the transportation hub of the Eastern Förder County, Masi is well connected to Oslo via the E6 highway and the railroad line, and is only 40 minutes away from Oslo's Gallemoen Airport. With a population of approximately 35,000, the city combines the practicality of an industrial city with the livability of a coastal town, making it an important satellite town of the Oslo metropolitan area.
Nadzab is a major town in Morobe Province, Papua New Guinea, about 40 kilometers northwest of Lae, at the entrance to the Markham Valley, a key link between the Highlands and the coast. A World War II heritage site, Nadzab was once an important Allied airbase, and today its Nadzab Airport is the second largest in Morobe province, carrying domestic flights and helping to export local agricultural products such as coffee and cocoa. Surrounded by a tropical rainforest climate and an economy based on agriculture and air logistics, Nadzab is an important transit point for trade between the interior and the coast of PNG, and is characterized by a combination of natural ecology and historical and cultural attractions.