The US Army Corps of Engineers dredged the St Clair river, resulting in greater outflow. There were plans to build structures to mitigate the increased outflow, but the plans were never carried through to the end. As a result, the Huron/Michigan system is losing 2.5 billion gallons of water each day...far more than the 845 million gallon outflow prior to dredging.
They all are. In fact, that's all they are. Water.
If you mean the Great Lakes, then no.
Most lakes are too small for the effect to be great or, if any at all. Tides are not always caused by the gravitational pull pf the moon and have no effect on small bodies of water, such as lakes. Even the Great Lakes tides are less than 5 centimeters in height
No. The Gulf of California is thousands of miles away from the Great Lakes across mountains and the the continental divide. It would be impossible for any water connection, natural or man-made, to connect the two.
None. There are no parts of any great lakes in Colorado.
None of the Great Lakes touch any of the Great Plains States.
Any kind from fresh to Salt. The Caspian Sea is the larget Lake in the world...it is Salt water...Great Salt Lake another example. Lakes are not defined by salinity!
No
NO
none of the great lakes are man made all of them were made from nature
no
No. There are only five great lakes. None of which are in Alberta. They are:Superior, Huron, Michigan, Erie and Ontario.
The people of the First Nations travelled the Great Lakes in canoes long before any Europeans did.