The Selemdzha Range ( Russian : Селемджинский хребет ) is a range of mountains in the Russian Far East . Administratively it belongs partly to Amur Oblast and partly to the Khabarovsk Krai of the Russian Federation .
4-453: There is gold ore prospection in the area of the range. The Selemdzha Range is a range of moderate altitudes located in the eastern end of Amur Oblast and the western side of Khabarovsk Krai. Is highest point is 1,940 metres (6,360 ft) high Mount Iryungda located in the eastern part. River Inaragda , a right tributary of the Selitkan , has its sources in the range. The range runs in
8-701: A roughly east/west direction for about 250 kilometres (160 mi) flanking the northern banks of the Selemdzha River . To the north of the western part of the mountain chain rises the Dzhagdy Range and to the south of its eastern part, the Ezop Range , running roughly parallel to it. The northern end of the Yam-Alin and the southern end of the Taikan Range meet at the easternmost limit of
12-789: The Bureya Range , the Dusse-Alin from the south, the Ezop Range from the west and the Yam-Alin from the north, and flows first northwest with the Selemdzha Range to the north, and then westwards across the Zeya-Bureya Plain . The Baikal–Amur Mainline crosses the river just west of Fevralsk and reaches the Zeya north of the Trans-Siberian Railway and Blagoveshchensk . Its main tributaries are
16-509: The range. The slopes of the range are covered by taiga , mainly consisting of larch . Selemdzha River The Selemdzha ( Russian : Селемджа ) is a river in the Amur Region of Russia . It is the biggest, left tributary of the Zeya . The length of the river is 647 km. The area of its basin 68,600 km². The Selemdzha has its source where three mountain ranges meet
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