Putorana Plateau | |
Other Name: | Путорана |
Country: | Russia |
Region Type: | Federal subject |
Region: | Krasnoyarsk Krai |
Border: | North Siberian Lowland Tunguska Plateau Syverma Plateau |
Highest: | Mount Kamen |
Elevation M: | 1678[1] |
Length Km: | 800 |
Width Km: | 500 |
Range Coordinates: | 69°N 123°W |
Parent: | Central Siberian Plateau |
Geology: | Basalt, trap rock |
Map: | Russia Krasnoyarsk Krai |
Easiest Route: | From Norilsk and Talnakh |
Image Upright: | 1.2 |
Location: | Krasnoyarsk Krai, Russia, Asia |
Criteria: | (vii), (ix) |
Id: | 1234rev |
Coordinates: | 69.0469°N 94.1581°W |
Year: | 2010 |
Area: | 1887251ha |
Buffer Zone: | 1773300ha |
The Putorana Plateau or the Putorana Mountains is a mountainous area in the Russian Federation.It is a large massif or plateau crossed by mountain ranges. The nearest large settlement is Norilsk, where foreign travel is restricted. The city is served by Alykel Airport.
The area of the mountains contains some of the largest known nickel deposits in the world.
The Putorana Plateau is a high-lying plateau crossed by mountain ranges at the northwestern edge of the Central Siberian Plateau. It is located east of the Yenisei River valley, between 67° and 70° N of latitude, southwest of the Anabar Plateau, north of the Syverma and Tunguska plateaus and south of the North Siberian Lowland.[2] The main subranges of the Putorana are the Keta Range, Lontokoisky Kamen, Kharayelakh Range, Chaya-Ayan, Brus Kamen, and Lama Range, among others.[3] The highest mountain in the range system is Mount Kamen which stands 1678m (5,505feet) above sea level and is also the highest point of the Central Siberian Plateau. Talnikovy Waterfall, is reputedly one of the highest waterfalls in Asia.
Lakes on the plateau such as the Dyupkun and Lake Lama are large and form whole ecosystems, which spread over many tens of kilometers. “Putorana” is from the native language of the Evenks and translates to “the country of lakes with steep banks”. The more than 25,000 lakes are between 180and deep, and together they form the second-largest store of fresh water in Russia by capacity after Lake Baikal.
Russia's geographical center, Lake Vivi, is situated on the southern limit of the plateau, where it overlaps with the Syverma Plateau.[4]
The Putorana area is mainly composed of basalt from the Siberian Traps.[5]
The Putorana region is located above the Arctic Circle. The climate is a harsh subarctic, sharply continental, with long, severely cold winters, and short, cool summers. However, in certain lake valleys, such as Lake Lama, there is a somewhat milder microclimate owing to the protection afforded by neighboring ranges from the northern winds.[6] The higher elevations within the plateau transition to a tundra climate.
Spring, summer and autumn fall respectively in the months of June, July, and August, the remaining months are winter with temperatures between -32C and -40C. In July, the warmest month, average air temperatures stay around 8C and may reach a maximum of 16C. Precipitation is between 500mm and 800mm, falling mainly in the summer in the form of rain. The snow cover in winter is relatively sparse.[5]
The Putorana Nature Reserve, established in 1988 and administered from Norilsk, is a protected area covering some 1887251ha with a buffer zone of 1773300ha. It was set up to protect the world's largest herd of wild reindeer, as well as snow sheep.
In July 2010, the Putorana Reserve was inscribed on the World Heritage List as "a complete set of subarctic and arctic ecosystems in an isolated mountain range, including pristine taiga, forest tundra, tundra and arctic desert systems, as well as untouched cold-water lake and river systems".[7]
The Plateau's minerals include igneous basalt rocks, iron ores (magnetite and hematite), silicates (prehnite, zeolite), apatites, perovskites and highly saturated copper and nickel ores. The natural resources are presented by abundant water and coal.[8]