This would depend on numerous factors such as location, time of year, etc
No, Lake Tahoe has never completely frozen over. It is to large a body of water (about 40 trillion gallons) for the core temperature to get low enough to freeze. On occasion, Emerald Bay will freeze over which is attached by a narrow, shallow opening.
I would use your mom as a sled to get over the lake and to shore
Never. Lake Ontario has never frozen 'solid'. It may have frozen 'over' as in the entire surface. From Wiki " Lake Ontario will be at most one quarter ice-covered, in a mild winter almost completely unfrozen. Lake Ontario has completely frozen over on only two recorded occasions: during the winter of 1874-75, and in February 1934."
No. A lake is not nearly big enough.
The wolves tread warily on the thinned ice over the frozen lake.
it is dangerous because the ice can crack u dope
they might stay the same or get worse, it depends on what type of lake what type of weather really, but in a hot place over a long period of time it will just evaporate, if in a cold place it will get frozen.
1979 was the last year that Lake Michigan froze over. Usually, ice only covers about 50% of the lake during the peak time in February. Actually, the lake did not completely freeze over in 1979 but it came pretty close. Also pretty close in 1977 and 1994 http://www.glerl.noaa.gov/pubs/brochures/ice/icecover.html
Crater Lake, located in Oregon, last fully froze over in the winter of 1949-1950. Since then, due to changes in climate, it has not completely frozen over.
Yes, but only very light amounts. It is primarily snow that is generated from topographical differences as a result of friction once it comes onshore.
As of February 26, 2014 there is no mention of anyone ever having walked across Lake Michigan. There have been times where the lake froze over such as in 1904 where at least 90 percent of the lake was frozen but never to 100 percent where it allowed a person to completely walk over.
If you half cook it first, over a year.