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In Newcomen's engine, steam was admitted to a cylinder as a piston moved up, and was then condensed by a spray of water, allowing air pressure to force the piston downwards. James Watt improved Newcomen's engine in 1769 by condensing the steam outside the cylinder (thus saving energy formerly used to reheat the cylinder) and by using steam to move the piston. Watt also introduced the double-acting engine, in which steam is alternately sent to each side of the piston forcing it up and down. The compound engine (1781) uses the exhaust from one cylinder to drive the piston of another. A later development was the steam turbine, still used today to power ships and generators in power stations. In other contexts, the steam engine was superseded by the internal-combustion engine or the electric motor.
Red symbolizes the fire from Iceland's volcanos. White represents ice. Blue stands for the mountains. Effective date: 19 June 1915.
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