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Both Lake Eyre and the Dead Sea are extremely salty. They both have elevations below sea level. Lake Eyre is 15m below sea level, whereas the dead Sea is over 400m below sea level.
Australia's lowest point of elevation is the bottom of South Australia's Lake Eyre Lake Eyre is an extensive 'salt sink' and has only filled to capacity three times in the past 150 years. When Lake Eyre does fill, it becomes the biggest lake in Australia, It is 15 meters below sea level in its lowest point.
The bottom of lake Eyre is 15 meters below sea level at its deepest point
Lake Eyre, in South Australia, is unusual because its elevation is 15 metres below sea level.
The highest point in Australia is Mount Kosciuszko at 7,310 feet above sea level. The lowest point is the dry bed of the former Lake Eyre at 49 feet below sea level.
The location of lowest elevation in Australia is Lake Eyre. It is 15 meters below sea level. The location of highest elevation in Australia is Mawson Peak, which is 2,745 meters above sea level.
South Australia is a big place, it varies from below sea level (lake Eyre) to 1435m above sea level at the peak of Mt Woodroffe.
Mount Kosciuszko is the highest point in the continent (and country) of Australia, while Lake Eyre is the lowest point in the same continent.Mt Kosciuszko is in southern New South Wales and Lake Eyre lies in outback South Australia.
Lake Eyre salt pans are below sea level. The basin in which it is located includes the Sturt Stony Desert, Tirari Desert and the Strzelecki Desert. Lake Eyre itself lies approximately 16 metres below sea level.
The surface of the Lake Superior is above sea level; the deepest part is about 600 feet below sea level.
Lake Eyre is the lowest point in Australia, at approximately 15 m (49 ft) (AHD) below sea level.
Lake Eyre in outback South Australia is 15 metres belowsea level.Do not confuse with Lake Erie, the smallest of the 5 Great Lakes of North America, whose waters, through the Niagara River, reach the 1,000-metre-wide Niagara Falls, dropping 176 feet [ 53.6 metres ] on their way to the Atlantic Ocean.