Lake Superior and Lake Michigan
Lake Superiror and Lake Michigan are two Great Lakes that touch Wisconsin. Keep in mind that there are many bodies of water in Wisconsin, just not great lakes.
Wisconsin is bordered by Lake Michigan to the east and Lake Superior to the north.
The state of Wisconsin is bordered by two lakes. Both Lake Superior and Lake Michigan border Minnesota, Michigan, and Wisconsin.
The two Great lakes that border Wisconsin are: Lake Superior in the north and Lake Michigan on the east.
Wisconsin and Michigan
The Great Lake States are: Minnesota Wisconsin Michigan Illinois Indiana Ohio Pensylvania New York (Plus the Canadian Province of Ontario)
Wisconsin does not border an ocean, but it does border two of the Great Lakes (Lake Superior is to the North and Lake Michigan is to the East).
Columbus River.
the correct answer to your question is fair and right here. witch 2 lakes border Wisconsin are lake superior and lake Michigan
There are two regions of the United States that touch the Great Lakes. These include the northeastern region, as well as the Midwestern region.
Two states touch the Mississippi River and Great Lakes. The Mississippi River originates in Minnesota at Lake Itasca and flows toward the southeast. The northeastern border of Minnesota touches Lake Superior. Wisconsin is the other state that touches both. It actually touches two of the Great Lakes. Its northern border touches Lake Superior and on the east is Lake Michigan. Its western border touches the Mississippi River.
The Great Lakes are bordered by the North American regions of the Midwest and Northeast. In terms of countries, the United States and Canada are the two nations that share the Great Lakes. The lakes are primarily situated along the border between the U.S. states of Michigan, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and New York, and the Canadian province of Ontario.
Oh, dude, that's an easy one. The great lakes are like the cool kids at the party, right? So, Lake Michigan is the one you're talking about. It separates Michigan and Wisconsin. It's like the bouncer keeping those two states in check.
Michigan because the upper peninsula (north of Wisconsin) is separated from the lower part by Lake Michigan.