The St. Lawrence River flows from Lake Ontario to the Gulf of St. Lawrence of the Atlantic Ocean.
If you mean the Great Lakes, then no.
None. There are no parts of any great lakes in Colorado.
The Great Lakes are open to the ocean through the Gulf Of St. Lawrence and St. Lawrence River. The St. Lawrence River also has a very powerful current. Theoretically a shark could get into Lake Michigan through canals from the Mississippi or the ballast water from ocean going ships, but given the lakes low temperature all year round I doubt they would survive very long. The Amazon River is a natural habitat for bull sharks and is directly open to them whereas the Great Lakes are both cold and difficult to enter. The restricted access and environment would mandate a compelling reason for bull sharks to migrate to the lakes and there really isn't any. Additionally, no bull sharks have been spotted in the Saint Lawrence. Any bull shark that could enter the Great Lakes would die before reaching Lake Ontario.
None of the Great Lakes touch any of the Great Plains States.
No
NO
Canada is one of the largest countries in the world, in terms of surface area, and it has lots of rivers, lakes, mountains, and other natural features. The most important Canadian river is probably the St. Lawrence, which connects the Great Lakes to the Atlantic ocean.
none of the great lakes are man made all of them were made from nature
no
No. There are only five great lakes. None of which are in Alberta. They are:Superior, Huron, Michigan, Erie and Ontario.
The people of the First Nations travelled the Great Lakes in canoes long before any Europeans did.
All of the Great Lakes states touch water which eventually empties through the St. Lawrence River and seaway into the Atlantic Ocean.