Gitchigoomee is the Ojibwa (Chippewa) word for Lake Superior. Canadian folk singer Gordon Lightfoot sings about Lake Superior in his song THE WRECK OF THE EDMUND FITZGERALD: "The Legend lives on from the Chippewa on down of the big lake they called Gitchigoomee... "
"Gitchigoomie" is an Ojibwe (Native American) word meaning "big sea" or "great water." It is often used as a poetic name for Lake Superior in North America.
It's a place name from Longfellow's poem Hiawatha. It is apparently the Ojibway for "big water", and their name for Lake Superior.
The word you are looking for is Gitchigoomie, and is the Chippewa Indian name for Lake Superior. Most famous in literature because of its reference in the first line of the epic poem by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, "The Song of Haiawatha."
Lake Superior, Lake Huron, Lake Michigan, Lake Erie and Lake Ontario are collectively known as The Great Lakes. A great way to remember the names of the individual lakes is to utilize the acronym "HOMES", for "Huron, Ontario, Michigan, Erie, and Superior".
Superior lake is not an artificial lake because the first people came to the Lake Superior region 10,000 years ago after the retreat of the glaciers in the last Ice Age. They are known as the Plano, and they used stone-tipped spears to huntcaribou on the northwestern side of Lake Minong.
No. Lake Superior is larger than Lake Erie.
Lake Superior. Lake Superior - it is the largest lake in the Western Hemisphere in volume and the largest (true) lake in the world by size. Its size is 31,700 square miles and volume is 2,904 cubic miles.
lakes!
The most westerly of the Great Lakes is Lake Superior. Next, in order, are Lakes Michigan*, Huron*, Erie and Ontario, the latter being the easternmost. * What are known as Lakes Michigan and Huron are, hydrologically speaking, really just one body of water.
Lake Superior is a lake. Hence the name.
No, Lake Superior is a freshwater lake.