outside
Tatarskaya The West Siberian Plain is located east of the
Ural Mountains mostly in the territory of
Russia. It is one of the
Great Russian Regions and has been described as the world's largest unbroken
lowland – more than 50 percent is less than above sea level—and covers an area of about 2.6– which is about one third of Siberia. It extends from north to south for , reaching its maximum width of in its southern part. from the
Arctic Ocean to the foothills of the
Altai Mountains, and from east to west for from the
Yenisei River to the
Ural Mountains. Besides the Yenisei, other main rivers in the West Siberian Plain are from west to east the
Irtysh,
Ob,
Nadym,
Pur and
Taz. There are many lakes and
swamps and large regions of the plains are flooded in the spring. The long Yenisei River flows broadly south to north, a distance of to the Arctic Ocean, where it discharges more than 20 million litres (5 million gallons) of water per second at its mouth. Together with its tributary Angara, the two rivers flow . The valley formed by the Yenisei acts as a rough dividing line between the West Siberian Plain and the
Central Siberian Plateau. The
Siberian Uvaly is a low hilly region stretching from east to west across the plain. Glacial deposits extend as far south as the Ob-Irtysh confluence, forming occasional low hills and ridges, including the
Ob Plateau in the south, but otherwise the plain is exceedingly flat and featureless. The
Ishim Plain and the
Baraba Lowland in the south are important agricultural areas. There are salt lakes in the
Kulunda Plain, which extends southwards into
Kazakhstan and is limited to the south by the
Kokshetau Hills. The West Siberian Plain is very
swampy and soils are mostly
peaty
Histosols and, in the treeless northern part,
Histels. It is one of the world's largest areas of peatlands, which are characterized by
raised bogs. The
Vasyugan Swamp that covers most of the
Vasyugan Plain is one of the world's largest single raised bogs, covers approximately . There are numerous lakes in the vast interfluve swamps of the Ob-Taz
floodplain. ==Flora and fauna==