Kedon Range
The Kedon Range is a mountain range in Magadan Oblast, Far Eastern Federal District, Russia.
The Kedon Range is separated from the other ranges of the Highlands by tectonic basins. The mountains are not very high and are dissected by numerous river valleys, mainly tributaries of the Kedon. The area of the range is uninhabited.History
Formerly there was a village in the southern area of the range where the Buksunda reindeer-breeding state farm operated. It was located at by the left bank of the long Tik river, a right tributary of the Kedon. The village had 115 inhabitants in 1984 but lost its population at the turn of the millennium. Now it lies abandoned.Geography
The Kedon Range rises in the central sector of the Kolyma Highlands system. The main ridge runs in an arch to the west and southwest of the course of the Omolon. It stretches from the south to the northwest for over from the eastern end of the Molkaty Range in the south. The southern end is not clearly delimited, with the Kedon and Molkaty ranges merging with each other. To the west and northwest rises the Kongin Range. The highest mountain of the range is a high peak located in the southern part of the range.Hydrography
The long Kedon river originates in the Molkaty Range to the south and cuts across the central area of the Kedon Range on its way northwards. Further upstream of its mouth many short left tributaries of the Omolon, such as the long Pravaya Khulchan have their sources in the range.Flora
The slopes of the Kedon Range are bare and have a barren look. There are sparse larch forests in the valleys.