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Tas-Kystabyt

Coordinates: 63°50′N 144°0′E / 63.833°N 144.000°E / 63.833; 144.000
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Tas-Kystabyt
Таас Кыстаабыт / Тас-Кыстабыт
Sarychev Range
Tas-Kystabyt is located in Far Eastern Federal District
Tas-Kystabyt
Tas-Kystabyt
Location in the Far Eastern Federal District, Russia
Highest point
PeakUnnamed
Elevation2,341 m (7,680 ft)
Dimensions
Length175 km (109 mi) NNW / SSE
Geography
CountryRussia
Federal subjectSakha Republic and Magadan Oblast
Range coordinates63°50′N 144°0′E / 63.833°N 144.000°E / 63.833; 144.000
Parent rangeChersky Range,
East Siberian System
Borders onOymyakon District and Susuman District
Geology
OrogenyAlpine orogeny[1]
Rock type(s)Siltstone, mudstone and Granite intrusions
Climbing
Easiest routeFrom Susuman or Ust-Nera

The Tas-Kystabyt (Russian: Тас-Кыстабыт, Yakut: Таас Кыстаабыт, romanized: Tâs Kıstâbıt) is a mountain range in the Sakha Republic and Magadan Oblast, Far Eastern Federal District, Russia. It is also known as "хребе́т Са́рычева" —Sarychev Range, in honor of 19th century Russian cartographer Admiral Gavril Sarychev.[2]

Geography

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The Tas-Kystabyt rises in the southeasternmost sector of the Chersky Range System. The range is bound by the upper Indigirka River valley and its tributary, the Nera River. The highest mountain of the range is an unnamed 2,341 metres (7,680 ft) high summit.[2][3]

The range stretches in a roughly NNW/SSE direction for about 175 kilometers (109 mi). It separates the Oymyakon Plateau to the west from the Nera Plateau to the northeast. To the east it is bound by the Upper Kolyma Highlands and to the south it overlaps with the Suntar Khayata Range.[4][5][6]

Flora

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The lower slopes of the range are covered by sparse larch taiga. The higher elevations have only mountain tundra.[3]

References

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  1. ^ Geology of Northeastern Siberia
  2. ^ a b Тас-КыстабытGreat Soviet Encyclopedia in 30 vols. / Ch. ed. A.M. Prokhorov - 3rd ed. - M, 1969–1978
  3. ^ a b Wielka Encyklopedia Gór i Alpinizmu, tom 2 Góry Azji, Katowice: Wydawnictwo STAPIS, 2005, ISBN 83-88212-42-7.
  4. ^ National Atlas of Russia
  5. ^ 1,000,000 scale Operational Navigation Chart; Sheet D-8
  6. ^ Google Earth
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