About Ukraine
Ukraine is located at the south-eastern border of Central Europe and has its own territory, government,
national emblem, flag and anthem. It borders on Russia, Belarus, Moldova, Slovakia, Romania, Hungary and Poland on land and
Russia, Georgia, Bulgaria, Romania and Turkey on sea.
The territory of Ukraine is mostly a level, treeless plain, called "steppe".
There are the Crimean Mountains in the Crimean peninsula and the
Carpathians in the west, but ukrainian mountains are not very high.
Mixed forests of pine and fir-trees, beeches, limes, oaks and elms cover the mountains.
The thickest woods can still be found in the northern part of the republic,
in Volyn. Kiev and Cherkassy lie in the midst of Ukrainian southernmost
pine forest. The main Ukrainian river is the Dnieper.
It is one of the
longest European rivers and one of the republic's main source of
hydroelectric power. The Dnieper and its tributary the Ross have been known as
the cradle of the Ukrainian and Russian nations.
The climate of the country is moderate. Winter is rather mild, with no
severe frosts but with regular snowfalls everywhere except the south. The
rivers and lakes freeze in winter. The average winter temperature varies -20 Centigrade in the north
to -3-5 in the south. Summer is quite hot and dry, with occasional showers and thunderstorms. The
fertile black soil is well watered in spring and autumn and gets plenty of sunshine in summer.
Due to favorable climatic conditions, Ukraine is traditionally an agricultural area. It grows wheat,
corn, buckwheat and other cereal, red and green vegetables, all kinds of fruit, melons and berries.
Ukraine is one of the world's main centers of sugar production. It produces sugar both for her own
needs and for export.
The country is rich in natural resources, such as iron ore, coal, color metal, oil, gas, mineral salts,
clay and potential water power. It has developed a varied industry, concentrated mostly in and
around big cities, such as Kiev, Zaporozhye, Dnepropetrovsk, Dnyeprodzerzhinsk, Odessa, Kharkov,
Lviv, Nickolayev and others. It produces planes and ships, lorries and buses, motorcars and
locomotives, computer and electronic equipment, precision instruments and agricultural machines,
TV and radioset, chemicals and textiles and various consumer goods. Odessa, Sebastopol,
Nikolayev, Kherson and Kerch are main ukrainian ports.
Some links
Tetiana Hryn'ova
Last modified: Thu Feb 28 00:43:57 PST 2002