The Great Salt Lake in Utah is the only lake with the name "Great Salt Lake" but it is not the only saltwater lake in the world.
Nope. There are only five Great Lakes: Superior, Erie, Michigan, Ontario, and Huron. Even if it says "Great" in the name of the lake, it's not a great lake. alright
Lake Michigan
Lake Michigan is the only great lake to be located fully in the United States every other great lake is located in both Canada and United States
The names of the great lakes are Lake Superior, Lake Huron, Lake Michigan, Lake Ontario, and Lake Erie. The lake in the US only is Lake Michigan. The rest are partially in Canada and the USA.
Pennsylvania only has a border with one Great Lake, Lake Erie, between its shorelines in Ohio and New York.
The Great Salt Lake in Salt Lake City is salty. It is one of the most salty lakes in the world. Probably the Dead Sea is the only body of water that is saltier in the world.
There is only one Great Salt Lake. Perhaps you meant to ask about the Great Lakes, which are not the same as the Great Salt Lake.
Yes, it is. And it is not the only landlocked body of salt water in the world. The Dead Sea and the Caspian Sea are two others Lake eyer is another in Australia, when it is full it has a very high concentration of salt.
By no means. Among dozens are the Salton Sea in California, and the Dead Sea in the Middle East.
It's in Salt Lake City, Utah, it's the largest lake in the Great Basin, it's estimated to be 33 feet deep, has from 5 to 16 islands on it, and it's the only lake with salt in it.
The Salton Sea, in southern California.
no lakes do not have mouthes only rivers do
The Great Salt Lake in Utah is not one of the Great Lakes. The Great Lakes are located in the northeast of the United States on the border with Canada (in Wisconsin, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and New York) and are freshwater lakes.
The salt comes from the minerals that are dissolved in the water that runs into the lake. The Great Salt Lake doen't have any rivers running out of it. The only place for the water to go is up (evaporation). So all the water evaporates and the minerals (salt) are left behind.
No. Lake Michigan, like all of the Great Lakes, is fresh water only.
The Great Salt Lake, unlike other lakes, has no outlet. Any water flowing into the lake only leaves by evaporation. Over time, the minute traces of salt in the incoming water get concentrated. The Dead Sea is another example of this.
No, all LAKES are freshwater. OCEANS are saltwater. Lake Michigan is a freshwater lake, but the answer above is false. See, for example, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Salt_Lake or http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lake