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| An
Overview of Lake Ontario |
Lake Ontario is similar to Lake Erie in length and
breadth (193 miles by 53 miles). Yet with its greater average depth (approximately 283
feet), Lake Ontario holds almost four times the volume (393 cubic miles) and has a
retention time of about 6 years . The drainage basin covers parts of Ontario and New York,
and a small portion of Pennsylvania. Major urban industrial centers, such as Hamilton and
Toronto, are located on its shore. The U.S. shore is less urbanized and is not intensively
farmed.
References
Great Lakes Atlas, Environment
Canada and U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1995 |
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| Lake
Ontario Facts & Figures |
Length - 193 miles / 311 km.
Breadth - 53 miles / 85 km.
Ave. Depth - 283 ft. / 86 m
Max. Depth - 802 ft. / 244 m.
Volume - 393 cubic miles / 1,640 cubic km.
Water Surface Area - 7,340 sq. miles / 18,960 sq. km.
Drainage Basin Area - 24,720 sq. miles / 64,030 sq. km.
Shoreline Length (including islands) - 712 miles / 1,146 km.
Elevation - 243 ft. / 74 m.
Outlet - St. Lawrence River to the Atlantic Ocean
Retention/Replacement Time - 6 years
Name - Champlain first called it Lake St. Louis in 1632. On a Sanson map
in 1656, it remained Lac de St. Louis. In 1660, Creuxius gave it the name Lacus Ontarius.
Ontara in Iroquois means "lake," and Ontario, "beautiful lake."
References
Great Lakes Atlas, Environment
Canada and U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1995
Lake Ontario, the 14th largest lake in the world, is the
smallest of the Great Lakes in surface area.
It ranks fourth among the Great Lakes in maximum depth,
but its average depth is second only to Lake Superior.
Lake Ontario lies 325 ft (99 m) below Lake Erie, at the
base of Niagara Falls.
The falls were always an obstacle to navigation into the
upper lakes until the Trent-Severn Waterway, along with the Welland and Erie Canals were
built to allow ships to pass around this bottleneck. The oldest lighthouse on the U.S.
side of the Great Lakes was set up at Fort Niagara in 1818 to aid navigation.
The basin is largely rural, with many scenic resort
areas.
A few large urban areas, including Ontario's capital city
(Toronto), are located on the Canadian shoreline.
In 1972-73, 1,000 scientists, engineers and technicians
undertook the most extensive survey ever made of a Great Lake.
References
Lake Ontario brochure, 1990, Michigan Sea Grant |
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