The Great Lakes are 5 interconnect freshwater lakes in North America. The lakes, Eire, Huron, Michigan, Ontario, and Superior, are located in Canada and/or the USA. All of these lakes are very deep. The graph above compares each of the Great Lakes max depth in feet.
Lake Superior is the deepest lake with a whooping 1333 ft max depth. Lake Michigan come in second with a max depth of 925 feet. In third place is Lake Ontario with a 804 feet max depth. In fourth is Lake Huron with a max depth of 748 feet. Lake Erie comes in last, and is the outlier with a very small max depth of 210 ft. All this info can be seen in the graph above.
Great Lakes Max Depth Graph Notes:
The x-axis (horizontal part of the graph) shows the name of the Great Lake. The y-axis (vertical part of the graph) shows the max depth for that Great Lake in feet. The lakes are listed in alphabetical order. Great Lakes: Located in the USA and Canada, 5 interconnected fresh water lakes: Eire, Huron, Michigan, Ontario, and Superior. One of the largest surface freshwater ecosystems.