Using the depths of 1332 and 802 feet respectively, Lake Superior is about 530 feet (161.5 m) deeper than Lake Ontario.
(Lake Ontario's surface height above MSL is more than 350 feet lower than the height of Lake Superior, as evidenced by the intervening Niagara falls.)
366 feet
682
Very much so. Lake Baikal is over 5,000ft deep and millions of years old. Lake Superior by comparison is a little puddle only 1,300ft deep and a young pup only 10,000 years old.
The five North American "Great Lakes" have the same names in Canada and the US : (by size) Lake Superior, Lake Huron, Lake Michigan, Lake Erie, and Lake Ontario. A sixth, much-smaller lake, called Lake St. Clair, lies on the waterway between Lakes Michigan and Erie.
The main bodies of water in the Midwest are the five Great Lakes. The Great Lakes are Lake Huron, Lake Ontario, Lake Michigan, Lake Erie, and Lake Superior. A large lake but much smaller than the Great Lakes is Lake Winnebago in Wisconsin.
Not even close. Lake Ontario has an area of 7,300 square miles, while the Great Salt Lake is 1,700 square miles.
well since lake Ontario is a great lake it is on the border of the u.s. and in Canada so not really a country as much as a border!
The Adirondack Mountains which cover much of the area between Lake Ontario and Lake Champlain are in the northern part of which state?
Lake Superior is the largest lake in Michigan, although much of the lake is actually located in Ontario (Canada) and portions are also technically in Minnesota and Wisconsin. The other Great Lakes bordering on the state are in order of size: Huron, Michigan, and Erie, and each also is shared with other states and/or Ontario. The largest lake contained completely within the borders of Michigan is Houghton lake in Roscommon County, with 20,044 acres (over 31 square miles) in area. The deepest is Torch lake in Antrim and Kalkaska counties, which while it is only 18,770 acres in area, has depths up to 285 feet.
that much
No. According to Wikipedia (the font of all knowledge), Enland is 130,410 square kilometres whereas Lake Ontario is 18,960 square kilometres. Not even close (although I had heard this too).
The question is much too vague. Ontario is a huge province with many hundreds of lakes. What in particular do you mean by "the Five Lakes"? Your question might imply the five Great Lakes, but only four of the five have a border with Ontario, and none of them are "in" Ontario, they all are shared with American states, mostly Michigan.
It would depend on the time of year