After researching for over an hour I was not able to find how many lakes there are... But I did find a list of all the lakes in the U.S and trust me, there are over a 100. I would estimate about 150-210 lakes in the U.S.
including lake panelapy there is 24. lake panelapy was a lake that was only a lake in winter and dried out in the summer. the shire of the town in Texas known as kalamunda, decided to line the bottem with clay so that the water wouldn't go away in summer.
Hundreds of thousands
22 natural lakes in the usa. Washington state has two which makes it the state w/ the most natural lakes.
According to the EPA there were over 123,439 lakes in 2006.
http://water.epa.gov/type/lakes/siteselect_factshee.cfm
in each state there are about 20,000 but altogether the us has 467,842 lakes
In total there are approximately 471719 lakes in the US, with a large number of them occuring as "frozen lakes" in Alaska.
The Great Salt Lake in Utah which the city named Salt Lake is named for is the largest salt lake in the United States. There may be smaller ones not large enough to be listed on maps.
one or two or three
105
There are about 1,000 natural lakes in Washington
Mountains,lakes and that sorta stuffMountains,lakes and that sorta stuff
The top 3 largest natural lakes in the US are: 1) Lake Superior. 2) Lake Huron. 3) Lake Michigan. **Note- these lakes also share boundaries with Canada.
There are many reservoirs including several that are called lakes, however there are no natural lakes in the state.
5 lakes and rivers
None
A lot!
Some states in the United States have few natural lakes, so they have dammed rivers to create artificial lakes called: RESERVIONS
2.8 million
There are no US states that have no lakes at all. If estuarial lakes are excluded, then Texas may be said to have only one (possibly 2) naturally formed lakes. Maryland is said to have no lakes because they are all "ponds" (i.e. smaller than lakes).
The Great Lakes are a natural feature.
Michigan has many natural resources. Michigan has sand dunes, the Great Lakes, forests, rivers, and smaller lakes, as well as many varieties of fish and wild life.