Shelag Range | |
Other Name: | Шелагский хребет |
Highest: | Medvezhy Logovo |
Elevation M: | 1105 |
Elevation Ref: | [1] |
Coordinates: | 69.8586°N 171.2761°W |
Listing: | Mountains and hills of Russia |
Parent: | Chukotka Mountains East Siberian System |
Location: | Chukotka Autonomous Okrug, Far Eastern Federal District |
Map: | Russia Chukotka Autonomous Okrug |
Range Coordinates: | 69.75°N 201°W |
Geology: | sandstone, slate |
Period: | Mesozoic and Cenozoic |
Orogeny: | Alpine orogeny |
Length Km: | 120 |
Length Orientation: | WNW/ESE |
The Shelag Range, Shelag Ridge (Russian: Шелагский хребет) is a range of mountains in far North-eastern Russia. Administratively the range is part of the Chukotka Autonomous Okrug of the Russian Federation. The area of the range is desolate and uninhabited except for a few mining areas.[2] [3]
The range was named after the Shelags, a little-known ethnic group that lived on the Arctic coast to the east of Cape Shelagsky.[4]
The Shelag Range is a northwestern prolongation of the Chukotka Mountains and is the northernmost range of the system.[5] This mountain chain runs in a roughly WNW/ESE direction for about, north of the Arctic Circle and parallel to the East Siberian Sea shore. Its western end is Cape Shelagsky and Chaun Bay and it is limited to the south by the Ichvuveyem Range, which rises by the Ichvuveyem river, beyond which lie the Chaun Lowlands. To the east the range is bound by the valley of the Keveyem (Кэвеем) river. The highest point is 1105m (3,625feet) high Medvezhy Logovo peak.[6]
The range has a barren look. The mountain slopes are covered with very little vegetation, mainly grasses, shrubs and "dwarf cedar", up to 300m (1,000feet) to 500m (1,600feet). At higher elevations there is only rocky mountain tundra.[2] The climate of the area is subarctic.