Yamalia



The River Sob, north of Kharp

Yamalia (Russian: Яма́ло-Нене́цкий автоно́мный о́круг yuh-MAH-luh nee-NYEHT-skee uhf-tah-NOHM-nee OH-krook) is the northernmost region in Russia's Urals Region and is home to Russia's most important natural gas deposits as well as large West Siberian oilfields. Located in the middle of Russia's Arctic Ocean coast, Yamalia is about as remote a destination as one could possibly choose and is rarely visited by anyone except those on oil and gas business.

The region borders the Arctic Ocean in the northwest and north (this part of Yamalia is split into two by the Gulf of Ob), Taymyria to the northeast, the Krasnoyarsk region to the east, Khantia-Mansia to the south, and Komi Republic and Nenetsia to the west.

Cities[edit]

Map
Map of Yamalia

  • 1 Salekhard — the administrative center and the only town in the world directly on the Polar circle
  • 2 Gubkinsky Gubkinsky (town) on Wikipedia
  • 3 Kharp Kharp on Wikipedia
  • 4 Labytnangi Labytnangi on Wikipedia
  • 5 Muravlenko Muravlenko on Wikipedia
  • 6 Nadym Nadym on Wikipedia
  • 7 Novy Urengoy Novy Urengoy on Wikipedia — the largest town in the region and the last stop on the Tyumen-Novy Urengoy railway
  • 8 Noyabrsk — few good reasons to visit this oilfield city (which is the second largest in the region), unless you are there on oil business
  • 9 Tarko-Sale Tarko-Sale on Wikipedia — for those looking to vacation in the exact middle of nowhere, this small town boasts a modest museum of local lore

Other destinations[edit]

  • 1 Mount Payer Highest mountain of the Polar Urals
  • 2 Gydan Nature Reserve Gyda National Park on Wikipedia — you will be confronted with neither long lines nor touts at this wilderness preserve located in the Arctic tundra of Yamalia's northeastern most bay on the Kara Sea. The nearest inhabited place is Gyda.
  • 3 Upper-Taz Nature Reserve Upper Taz Nature Reserve on Wikipedia (also Verkhne-Tazovskii Nature Reserve)
  • 4 Bely Island Located north of the peninsula. The research station Popov station is located there.
  • 1 Bovanenkovo gas field Reachable by Obskaya-Bovanenkovo line

Understand[edit]

Despite looking much like an ahistorical barren land of interest only for its natural gas and oil reserves, Yamalia was the site of some of the most interesting conflicts of Russia's Siberian expansion. Prior to conquest by Yermak Timofeyich (who was killed in the process), Yamalia was known as the Khanate of Sibir, led by the energetic Tatar Khan Kumuch, who mounted fierce resistance to Russian expansion and attempted to convert (and thereby unify against the Cossacks) his diverse people of Siberian Tatars, Khanti, Mansi, Nenets, Yamals, and Selkups to Islam. In the wake of the region's conquest, colonists established the first Russian settlement of the region, Salekhard, in 1595.

Get in[edit]

Novy Urengoy is at the end of the rail line from Tyumen, which passes through Surgut.

Salekhard, Novy Urengoy, and Nadym each have airports, which service flights from Moscow, Tyumen, and Yamburg, Nenetsia. while Novy Urengoy's airport has flights from Moscow, Tyumen, and Ufa. Noyabrsk's airport has some flights from Moscow.

Get around[edit]

By boat: Severflot [1] operates passenger boats on the Ob-Irtysh rivers and its contributors from Antipayuta in the north via Salekhard and Tobolsk all the way to Omsk in the south, a river journey of more than 3000 km!

See[edit]

Do[edit]

Eat[edit]

Drink[edit]

Stay safe[edit]

The bigger gas and oil towns have significant drug-related crime and visitors should be wary.

Go next[edit]

This region travel guide to Yamalia is an outline and may need more content. It has a template, but there is not enough information present. If there are Cities and Other destinations listed, they may not all be at usable status or there may not be a valid regional structure and a "Get in" section describing all of the typical ways to get here. Please plunge forward and help it grow!