- Alternate uses: see Lake
(disambiguation).
A lake is a large body of water, usually fresh water,
surrounded by land.
Large lakes are sometimes referred to as "inland seas" and small seas are sometimes
referred to as lakes. For examples (of saline lakes): the Great Salt
Lake, but the Dead Sea. The largest "lake" in the world is the Caspian Sea, and the deepest is Lake
Baikal in Siberia. The term lake is also used to describe a feature such as
Lake Eyre which is dry most of the time but become filled under seasonal
conditions of heavy rainfall.
Finland is known as The Land of the Thousand Lakes and Minnesota is known as The Land of Ten Thousand Lakes.
There are dark basaltic plains on the Moon, similar to lunar maria but smaller, that are called "lacus" (singular lacus, Latin
for "lake"). They were once thought by early astronomers to be literal lakes.
Over 60% of the world's lakes are in Canada; this is because of the deranged drainage system that dominates the country.
Kielder Water is Northern Europe's largest man-made lake.
See also
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