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Kyundyulyun, the northernmost spur of the Chersky Range on the right bank of the Yana near Ust-Kuyga. A lake in the Ulakhan-Chistay Range. The geographic boundaries of the mountain system are the Yana–Oymyakon Highlands in the southwest, the Upper Kolyma Highlands in the southeast, and the Momo-Selennyakh Depression in the northeast. [5]
The Chersky Range is part of the South Siberian System.It rises in the central part of the Transbaikal region of Russia, stretching in a northeast/southwest direction for roughly 650 meters (2,130 ft) between the left bank of the Chilka River and the valley of the Delingde River —a right tributary of the Vitim River of the Lena River basin.
The Batagaika crater is a thermokarst depression in the Chersky Range area. [1] The largest permafrost crater in the world, [2] it administratively belongs to the Sakha Republic, Russia, [1] and is in its Verkhoyansky District.
Mount Chersky (Russian: Гора Черского) is a mountain in the Baikal Range, Russian Federation. This peak is named after Lithuanian explorer Jan Czerski (1845 - 1892, Ivan Chersky transcribed from Russian), who greatly contributed to the study of Lake Baikal .
Mount Chyon (Russian: Гора Чён, romanized: Gora Chyon), [3] also known as "Gora Chen", is a mountain in the Sakha Republic (Yakutia), Russia. At 2,690 m (8,830 ft) it is the highest summit in the Silyap Range, part of the central Chersky Range, East Siberian System.
Authorities in the region of Kurgan in Russia's Urals mountains ordered an evacuation from several districts on Saturday due to rising river levels, after large snowfalls melted and heavy rain ...
Mount Pobeda (3,147 metres (10,325 ft)), rising in the Buordakh Massif, is the highest point of the Ulakhan-Chistay, as well as of the Chersky mountain system. Climbing routes of varying difficulty are marked —up to category 5A. Moma River valley, featuring the extinct cinder cone volcanoes Balagan-Tas and Uraga-Tas.
The area of the East Siberian Mountains has a very low population density. [1] The territory of the mountain system is one of the Great Russian Regions. In some areas of the East Siberian Mountains, such as the Kisilyakh Range and the Oymyakon Plateau there are kigilyakhs, the rock formations that are highly valued in the culture of the Yakuts. [2]