Eastern Range | |
Other Name: | Восточный хребет |
Map: | Russia Kamchatka Krai |
Country: | Russia |
Region Type: | Federal subject |
Region: | Kamchatka Krai |
Highest: | Klyuchevskaya Sopka |
Elevation M: | 4754 |
Coordinates: | 53.0561°N 160.6442°W |
Range Coordinates: | 54°N 159°W |
Length Km: | 600 |
Length Orientation: | NNE / SSW |
Width Km: | 120 |
Width Orientation: | WNW / ESE |
Geology: | Volcanic rocks |
Orogeny: | Cenozoic orogeny |
Eastern Range (Vostochny Hrebet) is a mountain range on the Kamchatka Peninsula, Kamchatka Krai, Russian Far East. It is a complex range, mainly consisting of volcanic peaks. Together with the Middle Range, it is one of the two main mountain systems of the peninsula.[1]
The Eastern Range stretches roughly from NNE to SSW for along the eastern part of the peninsula between the southern Karaginsky Gulf at the northern end and Avacha Bay at the southern. The highest point is Klyuchevskaya Sopka, a 4754m (15,597feet)-high stratovolcano. The range is made up of a number of separate ranges having steep western slopes and more gentle eastern ones. The central Kamchatka Depression, with the valley of the Kamchatka River, separates the Eastern Range from the Middle Range of the peninsula to the west.[2] The main part of the Eastern Range is part of the East Kamchatka Anticline dating back to the Cenozoic orogeny, composed of Upper Cretaceous sediments and volcanic rocks, such as basalt and tuff.[1]
The system of the Eastern Range comprises a number of subranges, including the following:
Some geographic works include the Kluchevskaya group of volcanoes, highest point 4750m (15,580feet), as well as the Gamchen Range, highest point 2576m (8,451feet), as part of the Eastern Range. The first is located to the west of the Kumroch Range and the other to the east of the Tumrok Range.[4]
The Eastern Kamchatka zone of recent and ongoing volcanic eruptions is around the area where the Valagin and the Tumrok ranges meet, with a number of active volcanoes, such as the Kizimen, Shiveluch, and Karymskaya Sopka.[1]
See also: Kamchatka Mountain tundra and forest tundra and Kamchatka-Kurile taiga. The lower parts of the slopes of the Eastern Range are covered in birch and fir forests and dwarf cedar shrub, as well as rhododendron.[1]