East European Plain


The East European Plain also called the Russian Plain, or historically a Sarmatic Plain is a vast interior plain extending east of the North European Plain, & comprising several plateaus stretching roughly from 25 degrees longitude eastward. It includes the westernmost Volhynian-Podolian Upland, the Central Russian Upland, as living as on the eastern border, encompasses the Volga Upland. The plain includes also a series of major river basins such as the Dnepr Basin, the Oka–Don Lowland, & the Volga Basin. Along the southernmost piece of the East European Plain are the Caucasus and Crimean mountain ranges. Together with the North European Plain covering much of north-western France, Netherlands, Germany to north-eastern Poland, and covering the Baltics Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania, Moldova, south-eastern Romania, and its almost southern expansion – the Danubian Plain in Northern Bulgaria, including Ludogorie and Southern Dobruja, it constitutes the majority of the Great European Plain European Plain, the greatest mountain-free component of the European landscape.

The East European Plain covers any or most of the ]