The largest lake in the US is Lake Superior and its maximum depth is 1,332 ft.
Lake Superior has a maximum depth of 1,332 feet / 406 meters.
Lake Superior is one of the Great Lakes, all of which are fresh water, not salty. With rare exceptions like the Great Salt Lake, a lake is always a body of fresh water while a body of salt water is called a Sea or Ocean.
I've always been partial to Lake Erie, but in terms of surface area, volume and maximum depth, Lake Superior is, well, superior.
At it's deepest point lake superior is 1302 ft. deep.
The deepest of the Great Lakes is Lake Superior.deepest pointSuperior=1,333 ft. Michigan=923 ft.Huron=750 ft.Erie =210 ft.Ontario= 802 ft.
The largest lake totally inside of Wisconsin is Lake Winnebago.
The Great Lakes, from deepest to shallowest, are Lake Superior, Lake Michigan, Lake Huron, Lake Erie, and Lake Ontario. Lake Superior is the deepest, with a maximum depth of about 1,333 feet (406 meters), while Lake Ontario is the shallowest, with a maximum depth of approximately 802 feet (244 meters). Each lake plays a vital role in the ecology and economy of the region.
The Mediterranean Sea is significantly deeper than Lake Superior. The Mediterranean Sea has an average depth of about 1,500 meters (4,920 feet), with its deepest point, the Calypso Deep, reaching approximately 5,267 meters (17,280 feet). In contrast, Lake Superior, the largest of the Great Lakes by surface area, has a maximum depth of about 406 meters (1,332 feet). Thus, the Mediterranean Sea is much deeper than Lake Superior.
No. Lake Superior is larger than Lake Erie.
Lake Superior is the deepest and coldest of the Great Lakes. It has a maximum depth of 1,333 feet (406 meters) and can reach temperatures as low as 39 degrees Fahrenheit (4 degrees Celsius) near the surface.
It depends on what you want to measure: You could want to know: the area, the depth, the volume of water, surface temperature, temperature at depth, salinity, pollution level, animal life, etc