It continues between the Samogitian Watershed [lt] in the west and the Central Lithuanian Plain in the east.
[1] The relief is hilly and undulated, there are flat and endorheic troughs with lakes and swamps.
In the northern part there is the Kurtuvėnai moraine massif with altitudes of 140–160 metres (460–520 ft).
[1] Most of the East Samogitian Plateau belongs to the Dubysa basin (with the Kražantė, Gryžuva, Dratvuo rivers).
There are the Rėkyva Lake, Gauštvinis lake, Bridvaišis lake, and some smaller lakes, also some large swamps such as the Didysis Tyrulis (area of 47 square kilometres (18 sq mi)), the Praviršulio Tyrulis (36 square kilometres (14 sq mi)), the Rėkyva Swamp (26 square kilometres (10 sq mi)).