Kongin Range


The Kongin Range is a mountain range in Magadan Oblast, Far Eastern Federal District, Russia.
The area of the range is uninhabited. Geologically the range is composed of limestone, dolerite and andesite of the Devonian period, as well as Devonian, Jurassic and Cretaceous rhyolite, with some granite and granodiorite intrusions.

Geography

The Kongin Range rises in the central sector of the Kolyma Highlands system. The mountains are of moderate height, the highest summit of the range is a high summit rising in the southern part. Certain sources give a height of.
The range is located in the interfluve of the Omolon, Kedon and Korkodon rivers. The Namyndykan, a left tributary of the Omolon marks its northern limit, while the lower course of the Kedon and its left tributary Levaya Kedon limit the range to the east. To the west the range is limited by the Bulun and the Korkodon, while to the south it merges with the northern slopes of the Molkaty Range.

Hydrography

The Bulun, the longest tributary of the Korkodon, and its long tributary Vizualnaya have their sources in the western slopes of the Kongin Range.

Flora

On the slopes of the Kongin Range are there are sparse larch forests up to heights between and. At higher elevations the only vegetation is mountain tundra. The barren high altitude zone is separated from the forest area by a belt of Siberian pine dwarf forest.