Maanselkä

Maanselkä or Maanselka[3][4] (Finnish: Maanselkä; Russian: Манселькя) is a hilly region in Finland and Russia. It is located at the northern end of the East European Plain, around the Arctic Circle.

Maanselkä
Maanselka / Манселькя
Landscape of the hills near Kuoloyarvi.[1]
Highest point
PeakMount Sokusti
Elevation718 m (2,356 ft)
Dimensions
Length750 km (470 mi) NNW/SSE
Width75 km (47 mi) WSW/ENE
Geography
Maanselkä is located in European Russia
Maanselkä
Location
Maanselkä is located in Finland
Maanselkä
Maanselkä (Finland)
LocationNorth Ostrobothnia,
Lapland, (Finland)
Republic of Karelia
Murmansk Oblast,
(Russia)
Range coordinates67°40′N 29°30′E[2]
Parent rangeEast European Plain
Climbing
Easiest routeFrom Alakurtti or Kemijarvi

The Urho Kekkonen National Park, Oulanka National Park and Paanajärvi National Park are protected areas partly located in the Maanselkä hills. The main economic activities of the area are skiing, forestry, reindeer herding, hunting, as well as fishing in the lakes and rivers.[5]

Geography

Maanselkä is an extensive chain of smooth hills forming a watershed that separates the rivers flowing into the Baltic Sea from those flowing into the White Sea of the Arctic Ocean. It is located in northeastern Finland, in the eastern parts of North Ostrobothnia and Lapland, by the Russian border. In Russia the southern part of the range is in Karelia and the northern in Murmansk Oblast. To the northwest the drainage divide extends further into northern Norway.[2]

The hills are low and rounded. The highest point is Mt Sokusti, a 718 meters (2,356 ft) high summit in Saariselkä, on the Finnish side.[6] The highest point of Karelia, the 576 meters (1,890 ft) high Nuorunen, is located in the Russian side of the hill region.[7] There are many lakes in the intermontane basins, as well as rivers with poorly drained valleys and swampy forests. The highest elevations are treeless and barren, with some mountain tundra vegetation.[5]

Geologically Maanselkä is part of the central zone of the Baltic Shield. There are numerous traces of the erosional activity of ancient glaciers across the hills, such as lateral moraines and outwash plains.[5]

View of Nuorunen, the highest point of Karelia.
Sallatunturi panorama, Kandalakshsky District.

See also

References

  1. Painting by finnish painter Maija Kellokumpu (1892 - 1935)
  2. Google Earth
  3. A Gazetteer of the World, Volume 5, p. 12
  4. James Bell, A System of Geography, Popular and Scientific, Volume 1, p. 41
  5. "Манселькя". Great Soviet Encyclopedia.
  6. Full text of "Julkaisuja = Communicationes = Publications"
  7. Gora Nuorunen - Peak Visor
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