lakes are classified into four
Lakes are not classified by 'length'.
Ontario is home to approximately 250,000 bodies of water that are classified as lakes. The exact number is unknown. Nearly 4,000 of these are larger than 3Km2. Most are found in the northern portion of the province.
Earth's water is classified into different categories based on its location and state. This includes freshwater (found in lakes, rivers, and groundwater) and saltwater (found in oceans and seas). It can also be classified as surface water (found on the Earth's surface) or groundwater (found underground in aquifers).
Waterways can be classified into several types, including rivers, lakes, canals, and streams. Rivers are natural flowing watercourses, while lakes are large bodies of water surrounded by land. Canals are human-made waterways designed for navigation or irrigation, and streams are smaller, often tributary watercourses feeding into larger rivers or lakes. Each type plays a crucial role in ecosystems, transportation, and recreation.
Minnesota has so many lakes that it's hard to tell. Also, at what point is a body of water classified as a pond and not as a lake? Some ponds can be only a few yards across.
The Great Lakes
Saturn does not have water lakes, but it does have lakes of gas.
Islands are generally found in the Earth's oceans and seas, surrounded by water on all sides. They can also be located in lakes and rivers. Islands are classified as land surrounded by water in all directions.
Not in lakes but they may live close to lakes.
The Great Lakes
We have about 4 major lakes, and countless smaller lakes.
It is Finland that is called the land of lakes as it has thousands of lakes .9.4 percent of the country is covered by the lakes.