Mugodzhar Hills | |
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Highest point | |
Elevation | 657 m (2,156 ft) |
Coordinates | 48°38′38″N 58°32′47″E / 48.64389°N 58.54639°E |
Geography | |
Mugodzhar Hills Location Mugodzhar Hills Mugodzhar Hills (European Russia) | |
Location | Kazakhstan |
Mugodzhar Hills (Kazakh: Мұғалжар тауы, Mūğaljar tauy; Russian: Мугоджары, Мугоджарский хребет) or Mugodzhar Range[1] is a series of mountain ranges 275 miles (440 km) long in the Aktobe Region of northwestern Kazakhstan. They are considered to be a continuation of the Ural Mountains and connected with Southern Ural by Guberlin Mountains. They form the divide between the Caspian Sea and Aral Sea basins.
The Mughodzhary proper are of length about 200 km with width up to 30 km. They start at the Or River (река Орь) as a narrow range that further splits in two: Eastern Mugodzhary and Western Mugodzhary. The highest place (657 metres) is at Eastern Mygodzhars, Mount Boktybay (Boqtybay, Боктыбай). Some of the rivers that have their sources in the Mughodzhary are Or, Emba, Irgiz and Kauylzhyr.[2][3]
In a wider sense, Mughodzhary also include a number of other highlands and hillocks, in particular, Ural-Tobolsk Plateau, and the Northern Mughodzhary, which actually connect with Guberlin hills.
References
- ↑ Gory Mugodzhary Geonames
- ↑ "M-40 Topographic Chart (in Russian)". Retrieved 9 January 2024.
- ↑ Google Earth