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.
yes
yes, there aarae salt mines under all the great lakes
Seahorses tend to like Shallow Waters More than Deep Waters
6 to 8 feet in the middle of the lake. Very shallow all areas of lake. Used to be an Orchard.
The lake has an average depth of 14 feet. See the related link for more information.
It can be shallow or deep.
There has been no way to find the depth because the lake is shallow so subs cant get in but at the middle its so deep divers cant get deep enough to measure my theory is theres under watter tunnels and the loch ness monster swims threw from lake to lake but that's me.
No. It loses water only through evaporation. Very little water runs into the Great Salt Lake because the water is captured in high bank reseviors upstream. The reseviors are deep so they can capture the snow melt in the spring. The water in the reseviors is used for drinking water for the surrounding areas. If this water were to reach the Salt Lake, expensive desalination techniques would have to be used to get the salt out.
lake superior.
Very deep, at one point 413 metres deep
The difference between a shallow and deep foundation is very simple. A shallow foundation is not very deep and a deep foundation is.