Minnesota Outdoorsman
Minnesota - Specific Areas => Duluth And Duluth Area Lakes => Topic started by: Lee Borgersen on November 11/07/13, 05:45:45 PM
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Why it's called Lake Superior :scratch:
Pretty amazing..... Did you realize
how big this lake is? :whistling:
LAKE SUPERIOR FACTS:
:coffee: ...........
� Lake Superior contains ten percent of all the fresh
water on the planet Earth.
� It covers 82,000 square kilometers or 31,700 square miles.
� The average depth is 147 meters or 483 feet.
� There have been about 350 shipwrecks recorded in Lake Superior
� Lake Superior is, by surface area, the largest lake in the world.
� A Jesuit priest in 1668 named it Lac Tracy , but that name
was never officially adopted.
� It contains as much water as all the other Great Lakes
combined, plus three extra Lake Erie 's!!
� There is a small outflow from the lake at St. Mary's River
(Sault Ste Marie) into Lake Huron , but it takes almost
two centuries for the water to be completely replaced.
� There is enough water in Lake Superior to cover all of North and
South America with water one foot deep.
� Lake Superior was formed during the last glacial retreat, making it one
of the earth's youngest major features at only about 10,000 years old.
� The deepest point in the lake is 405 meters or 1,333 feet.
� There are 78 different species of fish that call the big lake home.
� The maximum wave ever recorded on Lake Superior was 9.45 meters
or 31 feet high.
� If you stretched the shoreline of Lake Superior out to a straight
line, it would be long enough to reach from Duluth to the Bahamas .
� Over 300 streams and rivers empty into Lake Superior with the
largest source being the Nipigon River .
� The average underwater visibility of Lake Superior is about 8 meters
or 27 feet, making it the cleanest and clearest of the Great Lakes .
Underwater visibility in some spots reaches 30 meters.
� In the summer, the sun sets more than 35 minutes later on the
western shore of Lake Superior than at its southeastern edge.
� Some of the world's oldest rocks, formed about 2.7 billion
years ago, can be found on the Ontario shore of Lake Superior .
.
� It very rarely freezes over completely, and then usually just for a few
hours. Complete freezing occurred in 1962, 1979, 2003 and 2009.