Central RussiaRange Type | Bogus mountain grouping for this site | Highest Point | Hill 358 (358 m/1175 ft) | Countries | Russia (93%), Ukraine (4%), Belarus (3%) (numbers are approximate percentage of range area) | States/Provinces | Tver’ (8%), Volgograd (5%), Leningrad (5%), Novgorod (5%), Voronezh (5%), Smolensk (4%), Moscow (4%), Saratov (4%), Penza (4%), Pskov (4%), Nizhniy Novgorod (4%), Ryazan’ (4%), Bryansk (3%), Tambov (3%), Vologda (3%), Kursk (3%), Kaluga (3%), Vladimir (3%), Ul’yanovsk (2%), Belgorod (2%), Mordovia (2%), Tula (2%), Orël (2%), Lipetsk (2%), Yaroslavl’ (2%), Ivanovo (2%), Chuvashia (2%), Mahilyowskaya (1%), Chernivhivs’ka (1%), Homyel’skaya (1%), Sums’ka (1%), Tatarstan (1%), Rostov (1%), Luhans’ka (1%), Kharkivs’ka (1%) (numbers are approximate percentage of range area) | Area | 1,130,568 sq km / 436,513 sq mi Area may include lowland areas | Extent | 1,406 km / 874 mi North-South 1,453 km / 903 mi East-West | Center Lat/Long | 54° 44' N; 38° 6' E | Map Link | Microsoft Bing Map | Search Engines - search the web for "Central Russia": Wikipedia Search Microsoft Bing Search Google Search Yahoo Search
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Map of Central Russia Click on red triangle icons for links to other ranges.
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Major Peaks of the Central Russia
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