European Plain
The European Plain or the Great European Plain is a plain in Europe and is a major feature of one of four major topographical units of Europethe Central and Interior Lowlands. It is the largest mountain-free landform in Europe, although a number of highlands are identified within it.
Location
The Great European Plain stretches from the Pyrenees mountains and the French coast of the Bay of Biscay in the west to the Russian Ural Mountains in the east, including parts of Belgium, the Netherlands, Germany, Denmark, Poland, Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia, Finland, Belarus, Ukraine, Moldova, Romania, Bulgaria, and Kazakhstan. Most of the Great European Plain lies below 500 feet in elevation. It has coastlines in the west and northwest to marginal seas of the Atlantic Ocean, in the northeast to seas of the Arctic Ocean, and in the southeast to the Black Sea. To the south of the Middle European Plain stretch the central uplands and plateaus of Europe elevating to the peaks of the Alps, the Carpathian Mountains and the Balkan Mountains. To the northwest across the English Channel lie the British Isles and their lowlands, while across several straits north of the Jutland Peninsula lies the Central Swedish lowland in the Scandinavian Peninsula, which is part of the Fennoscandia ecoregion.Most of the plain lies in the temperate broadleaf and mixed forest biome, while its far eastern portion extends into steppe of the ecoregion Eurasian Steppe.
Beside the Great European Plain, there are other, smaller European plains such as the Pannonian Basin or Mid-Danube Plain, which lies in Central Europe, Padana Plain which is located in the valley of the Po river, the Thracian Plain with Maritsa river, and lowlands of the British Isles.
The Great European Plain is divided into the North European Plain and the East European Plain. The subdivision is a historical one, rather than geomorphological: the Russian portion of the East European Plain is also known as the Russian Plain which covers almost all of European Russia.
In Western Europe, the plain is relatively narrow in the northern part of Europe, but it broadens significantly toward its eastern part in Western Russia.
Hydrology
The plains are cut by many important rivers like the Loire, Rhine and Vistula in the west; the Northern Dvina and Daugava flowing northwards in East Europe and Russia and the Volga, the Don and the Dnieper flowing southwards of European Russia.List of large bodies of water
- Baltic Sea
- Bay of Biscay
- Black Sea
- Caspian Sea
- English Channel
- Gulf of Bothnia
- North Sea
- Sea of Azov
- White Sea
Ecology
- Atlantic mixed forests
- Baltic mixed forests
- East European forest steppe
- Pontic–Caspian steppe
Geopolitical significance