Hi. I am the person who asked this question, and i felt like that i need 2 answer it.so actually, there is one lake under the gulf just in the midnight zone. and its pretty obvious that there is 1 in the midnight zone bcause like midnight zone have sooo much weird stuff that i was getting bored of it a bit. and why is there a lake when u think that all u see is the bottom? and you can really cant see the bottom of that lake. the water of the lake is heavier that the seawater floats above while the heavy water sinks. there u have it its easy and if im wrong u think go on Google search BBC the blue planet seas of life and watch it and now WATCH IT PLZ!all the way 2 the end.
and sea (get it?)
El Zacaton
Lake Superior is north of the Gulf of Mexico.
Yes, it is.
the source is the Lake Itasca The mouth is the Gulf of Mexico
Is not a lake.. its a gulf by definition (A large bay that is an arm of an ocean or sea) In terms of surface, i think the largest lake in Mexico would be Lake Chapala. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Lakes_of_Mexico
Illinois does not border the Gulf of Mexico. Illinois borders Lake Michigan.
The Gulf of Mexico.The Gulf of Mexico borders Louisiana to the south. Other major bodies of water in Louisiana include the Mississippi River and Lake Pontchartrain.
Water would move from the Gulf of Mexico to Lake Okeechobee by ocean water flowing up a river that joins with the lake
The source is Lake Itasca in Northern Minnesota. The Mississippi River empties into the Gulf of Mexico.
No it is a gulf. A gulf is a body of water (ocean or sea) that is partly surrounded by land. The Gulf of Mexico is an example as it is surrounded by Mexico, Texas, the Southern Gulf States, and Florida. Gulf means a wide separation.
It is neither: it is a Gulf, however a pretty large one.
Alabama is a southern coastal state in the United States. It boarders the Gulf of Mexico. Along with Gulf, the state is home to Mobile Bay, Lewis Smith Lake, Lake Guntersville, Wilson Lake, Lake Martin, and West Point Lake.