London--Greece could adopt Bitcoin, global warming might awaken dragons and disgraced motoring show host Jeremy Clarkson is going green: Aprils Fools' Day jokes around Europe on Wednesday ranged from chuckle-worthy to weird.
Swedish news site Nyheter 24 said that the ice hotel in Lapland was changing its name to the Snow Star or "SS Hotel" because its name in Swedish -- Ishotellet -- sounded too much like IS (Islamic State).
The English football club Arsenal said it was testing a new ball for left-footers and in Italy the women's weekly Grazia said Prince William's wife Kate had given birth to a baby girl and named her "Diana".
Newspapers around the world annually let their imaginations run wild with silly stories on April 1 to catch out gullible readers -- and this year was no exception.
Even the high-brow science journal Nature joined in on Wednesday with a fake study saying that global warming could cause hibernating dragons to awake.
Britain's Sun daily said music mogul Simon Cowell was to appear on a new £5 note, with football icon David Beckham tipped for the £20 note and actress Helen Mirren to replace Queen Elizabeth II on the £10 note.
Meanwhile Italy's Leaning Tower of Pisa is to be turned into a luxury hotel, said The Daily Telegraph, with tourist visits limited to two hours a day.
"They're taking the Pisa," local tour guide Mia Falova was quoted as saying by the broadsheet.
A new snore-detecting bookmark will use an alarm to stop readers from nodding off, while a chess match is being organised on the 38th parallel between North and South Korea, the paper also reported.
- 'Home-grown spaghetti' -
In Greece, where the government is locked in negotiations with its EU-IMF creditors, a news portal reported that the country could adopt Bitcoin as its official currency instead of the euro.
Greek Reporter said the plan was the personal brainchild of the country's maverick Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis.
The portal said Varoufakis "surprised even his closest aides at a secret meeting when he said 'we've had enough, we'll run on Bitcoin'."
AFP