Moma Range
The Moma Range is a range of mountains in far North-eastern Russia. Administratively the range is part of the Sakha Republic of the Russian Federation. The nearest town is Khonuu, served by Moma Airport.| Tap on a place to explore it |
- Type: Mountain range with an elevation of 1,748 metres
- Description: mountain range
- Also known as: “Moma Mountains”, “Momskiy Gory”, “Momskiy Khrebet”, and “Momskiye Gory”
Moma Range
- Category: landform
- Location: Russia, Eastern Europe, Europe
- View on OpenStreetMap
Latitude
66.388° or 66° 23′ 17″ northLongitude
145.69° or 145° 41′ 24″ eastElevation
1,748 metres (5,735 feet)Open location code
9RR79MQQ+6XOpenStreetMap ID
node 8039237204OpenStreetMap feature
natural=mountain_range
This page is based on OpenStreetMap, GeoNames, Wikidata, Wikimedia Commons, and Wikipedia.
We’d love your help improving our open data sources. Thank you for contributing.
Satellite Map
Discover Moma Range from above in high-definition satellite imagery.
In Other Languages
From Bulgarian to Yakut—“Moma Range” goes by many names.
- Bulgarian: “Момски хребет”
- Cebuano: “Momskiy Khrebet”
- Chinese: “莫馬山脈”
- Czech: “Momské pohoří”
- Czech: “Momskij chrebet”
- Dutch: “Momagebergte”
- Egyptian Arabic: “مومسكى خربت”
- Estonian: “Moma ahelik”
- French: “Monts de la Moma”
- Georgian: “მომის ქედი”
- German: “Momagebirge”
- Italian: “Monti della Moma”
- Ladin: “Ciadëina de Moma”
- Persian: “رشتهکوه موما”
- Polish: “Góry Momskie”
- Russian: “Момский хребет”
- Russian: “Момский Хребет”
- Turkish: “Moma Dağları”
- Ukrainian: “Момський хребет”
- Venetian: “Monti de ła Moma”
- Yakut: “Муома сиһэ”
Russia: Must-Visit Destinations
Delve into Moscow, Saint Petersburg, Bashkortostan, and Krasnodar.
Curious Places to Discover
Uncover intriguing places from every corner of the globe.
About Mapcarta. Data © OpenStreetMap contributors and available under the Open Database License". Text is available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license, except for photos, directions, and the map. Description text is based on the Wikipedia page “Moma Range”. Photo: Strokin, CC BY 3.0.