Geography of BelarusBelarus Location:\nEastern Europe, east of Poland
Geographic coordinates:\n53 00 N, 28 00 E\n Map references:\nCommonwealth of Independent States\n Area:\n Land boundaries:\n Coastline:\n0 km (landlocked)\n Maritime claims:\nnone (landlocked)\n Climate:\nTransitional between continental and maritime; cold winters (average January temperatures are in the range -8C &mdash -2C), cool and moist summers (avg. temp. 15C&mdash 20C). \n Terrain:\ngenerally flat and contains much marshland\n Elevation extremes:\n Natural resources:\nforests, peat deposits, small quantities of oil and natural gas, granite, dolomitic limestone, marl, chalk, sand, gravel, clay\n Land use:\n Irrigated land:\n1,150 kmē (1998 est.) Water resources: About 20,000 rivers and streams, with the total length of 91,000 km, and about 11,000 lakes, including 470 lakes with the area exceeding 0.5 km2 each. Naroch is the largest lake (79.2 km2, the deepest point about 25 m). \nSignificant amounts od swampy area, notably Polesie region. Natural hazards:\nNA\n Environment - current issues:\n*Soil pollution from pesticide use. \n*South-Eastern part of the country contaminated with fallout from 1986 nuclear reactor accident at Chornobyl, Ukraine, receiving about 60% of total fallout. Vast amounts of territory in Homyel and Mahilyow voblasts rendered inhabitable. Roughly 7,000 kmē (2,700 sq.mi.) of soil were contaminated by caesium-137 to levels greater than 15 curies per kmē, i.e., taken from human usage for indefinite time. In 1996 the areas contaminated over 1 curies per kmē of caesium-137 constituted about 21% of the total territory (only 1% decrease compared to 1986), and in 2002 over 1.5 mln people still lived in this area. \n \n Environment - international agreements:\n Geography - note:\nlandlocked
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