All hypersaline lakes contain a mix of both fresh- and saltwater; it is their excess of the latter that classifies them as "hypersaline," which, by definition, means they have a higher salt content than natural seawater (and certainly higher salt content than a freshwater lake).
Like the ocean, these lakes are generally fed by freshwater sources. Environmental and geographic factors are the main contributors to their hypersalinity. Normal lakes, unlike seas and other coastal waters, are landlocked and typically fed and drained by a freshwater river or stream. Hypersaline lakes, however, are often also terminal lakes, meaning they have no outlet and never flow to the sea.
Both the Great Salt Lake near Salt Lake City, Utah and the Dead Sea on the border between Jordan and Isreal are two of the better known hypersaline terminal lakes on Earth.
fresh water
Lake Michigan is fresh water.
No lakes in the world have saltwater and fresh water because if salt water entered a fresh water lake, the fresh water would turn into salt waterRead more: What_lake_has_both_salt_water_and_freshwater
Fresh water
Lake Tahoe, in the Sierra Nevada, is a freshwaterlake.
this depends on where the water is, if its in a swamp in the everglades it is considered brackish which is both salt and fresh water, in the ocean the water is salt water, if your at a lake, pond, or stream then it is fresh water, and if you are talking about water in a salt water pool the water isnt really salt water it just has chemicals to have the same effect.
The Sea of Galilee is fresh water, fed by the River Jordan. The salinity is beginning to increase from salt water springs in the bed of the lake because too much fresh water is being extracted, but it remains a fresh water lake at present.
well it can die if its a salt water shark in a fresh water lake, but if its a fresh water shark and its in a fresh water lake it will live.
lake - fresh water as ocean - salt water
industrial treated wastwater lake
Lake Superior is one of the Great Lakes, all of which are fresh water, not salty. With rare exceptions like the Great Salt Lake, a lake is always a body of fresh water while a body of salt water is called a Sea or Ocean.
There are both salt water and fresh water crocs.