Minnesota has about 2,560,299 acres of lake surface. Kansas has only two natural lakes and a couple of dozen man-made lakes. Kentucky has only three major natural lakes and many artificial lakes, so it has less lake surface, however, because of the 90,000 miles of streams in the state, Kentucky has more navigable miles of water than any state, other than Alaska.
minnesota mn- 1182 ky- about 70
Minnesota
4
Minnesota has about 2,560,299 acres of lake surface. Kansas has only two natural lakes and a couple of dozen man-made lakes. Kentucky has only three major natural lakes and many artificial lakes, so it has less lake surface, however, because of the 90,000 miles of streams in the state, Kentucky has more navigable miles of water than any state, other than Alaska.
Kentucky.
Minnesota has more lakes than Nebraska. It is often referred to as the "Land of 10,000 Lakes," with thousands of lakes scattered across the state. In contrast, Nebraska has significantly fewer lakes, and while it has some notable ones, it does not compare to Minnesota's extensive network of lakes.
==The Land of 10,000 Lakes== I can't say for sure just how fishable they are, but Minnesota's nickname is "The land of 10,000 lakes."
Yes. The Minnesota Department of Natural Resources puts the count of Minnesota lakes at 11,842. (That includes only those lakes that are ten or more acres in size).
Kentucky because of the amount of lakes and rivers.
More land, but there are a lot of lakes.
I was unable to find any lakes starting with X out of a list of more than 16,000 lakes in Minnesota.
Minnesota is the state known as the "Land of 10,000 Lakes".