a mojor lake is a lake like lake Erie, that is large enough to be a sea, but do the the biological life, and the fact that it is fresh water, its a lake there are 5 Remember HOME Heron Oregon Michigian Erie
Lake Ontario and lake Erie is the Great Lakes located in the Northeast.
There are tons of them. Lake placid, Saranac lake, some of the great lakes like Ontario and Erie
Canada and the USA share Lake Erie just like the other great Lakes except for Lake Michigan which lies completely in the USA
lake huron looks like an elephant, lake ontario looks like a boom box, lake michigan looks like a fire fighter, lake erie looks like a cotton ball, and lake superior looks like a tomato... hope this helps :D
Yes, but better: "Are Lake Huron, Lake Michjgan, Lake Erie, Lake Ontario and Lake Superior the names of the The Great Lakes?" I was looking for a definition of 'laked', which I had guessed and found valid in a game Jamble (like Scrabble) on IYT. The misspelling in this entry distracted me from the real definitions.
a body of water that is surrounded completely by land. A landlocked lake will have no water source such as a river, and gets its water contents through water seepage in the ground and water runoff with the surrounding land. In some cases these lakes can off a natural spring that keeps the water level constant
Lake Erie is not that deep, but people researched and discovered that there are full of enormous, scaly carnivore fish that act like sharks and eat meat.
yes, they like to hang around cleveland andmug people.
If you'd like the acronym (whatever it is) its HOMES H-Huron O-Ontario M-Michigan E-Erie S-Superior If you'd like the famous name, it's "The Great Lakes" I dont really understand your questaion but in which ever way
Actually, Lake Erie never actually caught fire. That's a myth, mostly perpetuated by a line in the first Crow movie. The lake was incredibly polluted, due to heavy industrial dumping. The actual fire occured on the Cuyahoga River (which feeds into Lake Erie). The Cuyahoga River actually caught fire several times. But in 1969, a fire on the river caught the attention of Time Magazine. This notoriety led to the EPA passing the Clean Water Act and several others.
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