SEATTLE
it is in the puget sound lowland
To the west, Puget Sound (which includes Elliott Bay). To the east, Lake Washington. Seattle is also bisected by the Ship Canal, which connects Puget Sound and Lake Washington, via Portage Bay, Montlake Cut, Union Bay, Salmon Bay, and the Chittenden Locks.
Seattle is located on the Puget Sound and Lake Washington. Lake Washington is the biggest lake in King County, Washington.
The major bodies of water in Washington state include:Major Rivers - Columbia River, Snake River, Yakima River.Major Lakes - Lake Franklin D. Roosevelt, Lake Washington.
Seattle is not on the Pacific Coast of Washington. It is on Puget Sound an inlet to the ocean. And, it has Lake Washington, Lake Union. And many other lakes and rivers in the area.
No. Puget Sound is not a river. Its a waterway which does connect to the ocean. There are bays on Puget Sound, Elliot bay is right downtown seattle, Shilhole bay is in Ballard neighborhood in the north west part of Seattle. Puget Sound is large about 100 miles. It extents from Olympia to the south to Way North of Seattle. Also Puget Sound the term is not just used for the waterway , it is also use to define the general area.
Four kinds of waterways in Washington are rivers (such as the Columbia River and the Snake River), lakes (such as Lake Washington and Lake Chelan), Puget Sound (an inlet of the Pacific Ocean), and the Strait of Juan de Fuca (a channel connecting Puget Sound to the Pacific Ocean).
east
No, the waves aren't big enough in Puget sound, and the water is freezing, but I suppose you could try. I doubt it would work though. In Lake Washington and Lake Union and Portage bay the waves aren't big enogh to keep up a surfboard. Once again in Puget Sound the water is freezing, so I suggest a wet suit.
It was formed about 20,000 years ago at the time of the formation of Puget sound.
Some of Seattle human and physical characteristics are the Space Needle, Hiram M. Chittenden Locks, Metro Transit Tunnel. Physical characteristics are Lake Washington, Snoqualmie Falls, Elliot Bay, Puget Sound, Lake Washington Ship Canal, or Lake Union. There are many more but those are some.
The Puget lobe and its two smaller lobes, the Olympia and Lake Russell lobes, were part of the Cordilleran Ice Sheet that covered much of the Pacific Northwest during the last ice age. These ice lobes shaped the landscape of Washington state, leaving behind features like Puget Sound and the glacially-carved valleys of the region.