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The Great Lakes, also called the Great Lakes of North America, are a series of large interconnected freshwater lakes spanning the Canada–United States border.The five lakes are Superior, Michigan, Huron, Erie, and Ontario (though hydrologically, Michigan and Huron are a single body of water, as they are joined by the Straits of Mackinac).
Toggle North America subsection. 1.1 Moraines of the Great Lakes Region. ... This a partial list of glacial moraines.
Glacial lakes of the Sawtooth National Forest (1 C, 99 P) Pages in category "Glacial lakes of the United States" The following 96 pages are in this category, out of 96 total.
Great Lakes (30 C, 67 P) K. Kettle lakes (6 C) P. Proglacial lakes (58 P) S. ... Pages in category "Glacial lakes" The following 52 pages are in this category, out of ...
Glacial lakes of Russia (3 P) S. Glacial lakes of Slovenia (1 P) U. Glacial lakes of the United States (3 C, 96 P) This page was last edited on 28 June 2023, at 12:53 ...
Kettle lakes form when a retreating glacier leaves behind an underground or surface chunk of ice that later melts to form a depression containing water. Moraine-dammed lakes occur when glacial debris dam a stream (or snow runoff). Jackson Lake and Jenny Lake in Grand Teton National Park are examples of moraine-dammed lakes, though Jackson Lake ...
Across the Great Lakes, maximum ice cover reached 16% on Jan. 22, the fourth lowest annual maximum on record. Lake Michigan hit a high of 18%, while Lake Superior maxed out at 12% ice cover.
During the Late Pleistocene, the Laurentide ice sheet reached from the Rocky Mountains eastward through the Great Lakes, into New England, covering nearly all of Canada east of the Rocky Mountains. [8] Three major ice centers formed in North America: the Labrador, Keewatin, and Cordilleran. The Cordilleran covered the region from the Pacific ...