type of breeze that blows from an ocean lake or land
Quite a number of lakes have saltwater.
For there to be an undertow in a lake it must have an underground water source, a spring feeding in and tides, caused by the moon, which happens only in the ocean. So my answer is no, a lake may not have an undertow. However, a lake may have a submerged drainage sink, which if not technically an undertow would have a similar effect.
They can be. It's all up to whether it has an outlet or not. Lakes with outlets are generally freshwater unless they are too close to the ocean and get intruded with seawater. If they have no outlet the minerals accumulates and the lake becomes salty.
Most of them are, but there are many that are not, like every mud puddle you ever spashed in. There are many others: Crater Lake, The Salton Sea, Mono Lake, The Dead Sea, Great Salt Lake...virtually all salty inland bodies of water are cutoff.
The sediments build up on the floor of the stream, ocean, river, or lake and causes the water to lower.
sea breeze
Sea Breeze
sea breeze
sea breeze
sea breeze
Land Breeze
No, the appropriate terminology for the phase is "sea breeze".
A sea breeze is what we call when air flows from the water to land. Lake breeze from a lake.
No, but an ocean can engulf a lake.
Lake superior, lake Michigan, lake Huron, lake Erie, lake Ontario
Not a lake, but an Ocean, The Arctic Ocean.
Ocean