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).
According to Wikipedia, Lake Superior covers an area of 49,300 square miles and England is 50,346 square miles so their size is very close.
No, England is much bigger.
I don't believe any lake is the size of Ontario. Perhaps the Caspian Sea is the size of Ontario. Ontario is enormous and contains thousands of lakes. Even Lake Ontario is nowhere near the size of province of the same name.
Lake Ontario is 7,340 sq miles in area.
No. Lake Michigan is the third largest of the Great Lakes. Lake Ontario is the fifth largest in size at 19,500 km2 .
Because, for example, it has a surface area of 31,820 sq mi compared to Erie's 9,940 sq mi.
Ontario is 415,000 square miles, approximately twice the size of Texas which is 268,600 square miles.
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.
Lake Erie Lake Huron Lake superior Lake ontario Lake michigan Lake okeechobee Lake Tahoe Lake pocono Lake Monroe Lake charles
Lake Superior, Lake Huron, Lake Michigan, Lake Erie, Lake Ontario. Largest to smallest: Lake Superior (82,400 km2) Lake Huron (59,600 km2) Lake Michigan (58,000 km2) Lake Erie (25,700 km2) Lake Ontario (19,500 km2)
The temperature for a lake depends on its location, depth, size, and season. For a more accurate answer, it would be best to designate which lake you are referring to, or at least a general location.
Lake Vostok is the largest sub-glacial lake in Antarctica. It is 13,000 feet under the surface of Antarctic ice. It is about the size of Lake Ontario. Scientists believe the lake could have ancient organisms, bacteria, and even fish.
no
The amount of water it would take to fill a lake varies. It depends on the size of the lake and whether the soil is dry or not.