Mineral Deposits of the Southern Ukraine and of the Ural Mountains

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
E. L. Bruce
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
19
File Size:
6364 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1938

Abstract

EUROPEAN Russia is mainly a great plain, the average elevation of which is only 600 feet above sea level and the maximum elevation less than 1,200 feet (Figure 1). The main divide between the Arctic ocean and the Black sea and Caspian sea is an indistinguishable topographic feature from which the Dneiper and Don rivers flow southward to the Black sea and the Volga river to the Caspian. The valleys of these rivers are but little below the general level (Figure 2). To the south, this great, rolling plain is broken by a low ridge of Precambrian gneisses and intrusive rocks. The Crimea is an upland from which the descent to the Black Sea coast is precipitous (Figure 3). The Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic occupies the southern part of the plain. It is the southwestern unit of the Union, bordered by Rumania and Poland on the west and by the Crimean Soviet Socialist Republic on the south.
Citation

APA: E. L. Bruce  (1938)  Mineral Deposits of the Southern Ukraine and of the Ural Mountains

MLA: E. L. Bruce Mineral Deposits of the Southern Ukraine and of the Ural Mountains. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1938.

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