Into Lake Huron (obviously.....)
River Missouri empties in Lake Eirie.
No, it is not. The Pacific is an OCEAN, not a LAKE. A really G-R-E-A-T way to remember the names of the FIVE Great Lakes is to use the acronym HOMES. H=Huron O=Ontario M=Michigan E=Erie S=Superior
The grand river empties into Lake Michigan.
Lake Superior drains into Lake Huron through the St Marys River.
The South Saskatchewan empties into the North Saskatchewan, and the north Saskatchewan empties into Hudson's Bay.
The lake that connects Lake Erie and Lake Huron, besides the Detroit River and Lake St. Clair, is Lake Huron itself. Specifically, water flows from Lake Erie into the Detroit River, which then leads to Lake St. Clair and subsequently into the Saint Clair River. The Saint Clair River ultimately connects to Lake Huron, facilitating the movement between these two Great Lakes.
The Grand River connects to Lake Michigan. It flows through western Michigan and ultimately empties into Lake Michigan at Grand Haven. While the Grand River does not directly connect to the other Great Lakes (Lake Superior, Lake Huron, or Lake Erie), it is part of the larger Great Lakes watershed system.
A river empties into a lake or ocean.
tributary
The only river leaving Lake Champion is Mill Brook which runs into Lake Champion and empties into the Delaware river - which DOES NOT empty into New York Harbor. If you mean to ask about Lake CHAMPLAIN, the Poultney River (which flows INTO Lake Champlain) connects to the Champlain Canal, which empties into the Hudson River, which empties into New York Harbor.
Lake Huron is on the eastern side of Michigan, between Michigan and Ontario. The southern end of the lake is Port Huron/Sarnia, where Huron meets the St Claire River, and the northern end of the lake is the Mackinac Bridge (pronounced "Mackinaw") where Lake Huron meets Lake Michigan. On the East-NorthEast side of the lake it connects to the St Mary's river and Sault Ste Marie and Lake Superior.
st. lawerence