Yes. The Netherlands is a very flat country with a high rainfall as well as rivers flowing into it.
the Mississippi river and the five great lakes horon, onarioe, and all those others
The Netherlands has a variety of landforms. Some of these include rolling hills, the Ardennes Mountains, as well as a number of lakes.
Mostly flat, grasslands and forests are most common. Lots of water, rivers and streams and lakes.
The Netherlands has a flat landscape so farmers can grow their crops and do not have to walk or drive over the mountains if their crops are ready to get collected.
The dutch who built windmills to push the water away, and the nature wich laid down sand and clay on the bottom of lakes and bays
The zuiderzee does not exiast anymore. We pumped a part of it dry and made it in to land for people to live on. The rest is still water but is now reverred to as the lakes: Ijsselmeer and Markermeer. The afsluitdijk (literally closure dam) seperates the lakes from the Waddenzee.
Approximately 26% of the Netherlands is water. This includes lakes, rivers, canals, and other bodies of water, making water management a crucial aspect of Dutch infrastructure and environmental policy. The country's extensive waterway system plays a significant role in its landscape and economy.
The Great Lakes
Saturn does not have water lakes, but it does have lakes of gas.
Not in lakes but they may live close to lakes.
The Great Lakes
We have about 4 major lakes, and countless smaller lakes.