Lake Erie is the shallowest of the Great Lakes. Its average depth is 62 feet, or 19 metres.
As far as I know, Sturgeon Lake in Oregon is technically considered a "lake". The deepest point of the whole area is approximatly 4 FT deep.
http://aol.research.pdx.edu/?q=lake/380
As far as I know, Lake Sturgeon in Oregon is technically considered a "lake". The deepest point of the whole area is approximatly 4 FT deep.
p\
Lake Erie.
lake Erie is the shallowest, its average depth is 62 ft, i believe the max depth is 210ft! :) No, that's the shallowest GREAT lake. The WORLD'S shallowest lake is Lake Pontchartrain @ 14 feet max!
Littoral
The benthic zone is a region at the lowest level of an ocean or lake. The intertidal zone is the shallowest part of the benthic zone.
Lake Erie. Because it is the shallowest lake so many people live near it and visit it a lot.
The smallest point of the Mississippi River is at Lake Itasca, in Minnesota, where it is only 20 to 30 feet wide. At Lake Winnibigoshish, it is about 11 miles wide.
A body of water freezes from shallowest to deepest. therefore usually from shore to middle.
The lowest and shallowest layer of the atmosphere is the troposphere
ganto yon..... kasi if you cross the stream it is the shallowest
Shallow, shallower, shallowest.
Comparative: shallower Superlative: shallowest
Brahmaputra is shallowest in the Himalaya mountains. This is because it is moving fast, giving it less time to weather away the rocks below.
People could pollute the smallest lake the most quickly. These lakes vary in size from specific location to another location.