As far as I know, it's Lake Erie that gets the warmest, and has the most shallow shoreline areas. Maybe someone else might know more?
Lake Superior
superior
Baker Lake, Nunavut.
Lake superior
Lake Superior is the deepest and coldest of the Great Lakes. It has a maximum depth of 1,333 feet (406 meters) and can reach temperatures as low as 39 degrees Fahrenheit (4 degrees Celsius) near the surface.
Lake Havasu City, Ariz. Lake Havasu City, on the eastern shore of Lake Havasu on the Colorado River between California and Arizona, has the highest average July temperature in the U.S. The city also recorded one of the highest temperatures ever in the U.S., 128 degrees on June 29, 1994. The desert in Death Valley has gotten even hotter, but this ranking focuses on residential areas.
-60 degrees F on January 9, 1977
Lake Superior is usually around 40 degrees.
no, its lake superior, its actually the deepest, coldest, clearest, and biggest fresh water lake in the world. ------------------------------------------------------ None of the Great Lakes is entirely within Canada. The largest lake entirely within Canada is Great Bear Lake. (Lake Ontario, by the way, is the smallest of the Great Lakes.)
Not sea but lake one of the great lakes to be exact Lake Huron if your wondering
antarticaThe Antarctic Continent is the coldest, and Vostok Station, which is located at "the pole of inaccessibility" (farthest point from any coast) is the coldest. They have had temperatures as pow as -89oC, and maybe a little lower.Its warmest temperature was about -12oC.There is an almost continuous wind from the Pole.The station is at an altitude of 3 488m a.s.l. (11 444 feet).On the bedrock below Vostok lies the world's largest sub-glacial lake.
Probably Nordo Korgula, which is a small island in Lake Baikal, Siberia.