oxbow lake
The movement of compacted snow across an area!
many sand and gravel deposits
The Great Lakes are more the result of glaciation than plate tectonics.
A feature that is not a direct result of glaciation is a river delta. River deltas form at the mouths of rivers where sediment is deposited as the river meets a body of water, such as an ocean or lake. This process is primarily influenced by river dynamics and sediment transport rather than glacial activity. Other examples include features like deserts or volcanic landforms, which are also unrelated to glacial processes.
I think it
No. A pluvial lake is a landlocked basin which fills with rainwater during times of glaciation, when precipitation is higher.
William E. Powers has written: 'Glaciation of the Grays Lake, Illinois, quadrangle' -- subject(s): Glaciology, Geology
No, Lake Tahoe is not an extinct volcano. It is a large freshwater lake located in the Sierra Nevada mountains of the United States. The lake was formed by geological processes such as faulting and glaciation, not volcanic activity.
Truman lake and Lake of the Ozarks are boty around 55,000 surface acres at normal pool, but Truman Lake can grow to over 200,000 acres for flood control> Source http://www.nwk.usace.army.mil/ht/TheLake.cfm
Oxbow lake
fresh water
The wet kind