The
lowland is named after the
Yana River in the west and the
Indigirka River in the east and is crossed by both rivers in their middle and lower courses. The Yana-Indigirka Lowland is roughly crescent-shaped, reaching a maximum width in its central part of . The average height of the plain is between and above sea level. There is an immense number of lakes dotting the lowlands, the largest of which are
Lake Bustakh with an area of , as well as
Orotko and
Soluntakh. The Yana-Indigirka Lowland also includes the lower course of the
Omoloy River at the western end, the vast delta of river Yana, as well as the
Byoryolyokh and
Allaikha lower course tributaries of the Indigirka in the east. Other important rivers of the lowland are the
Chondon, with its tributaries
Nuchcha and
Buor-Yuryakh, the
San-Yuryakh,
Sellyakh,
Muksunuokha,
Kyuyol-Yuryakh,
Khroma —with the
Uryung-Ulakh, the
Sundrun,
Dyagarin,
Bogdashkina and
Gusinaya, among other smaller rivers and streams. The large rivers meander and widen in the plain, reaching widths between and . The Yana-Indigirka Lowland is part of the wider
Yana-Kolyma system of lowlands, which includes the
Aby Lowland to the south of the Polousny Range and the
Kolyma Lowland in the eastern side. There are residual ridges of bedrock, up to high, rising above the lowland, the northernmost of which is the
Kondakov Plateau. ==Soil==