North America's OTHER Forgotten "Great Lakes"

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  • Опубликовано: 21 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 1,6 тыс.

  • @fraserhenderson7839
    @fraserhenderson7839 Год назад +1379

    I flew over Great Bear lake at 7,000' on a sunny day in August. Flying north, the late morning sun was behind us and it poured into the lake with minimal reflection. Great Bear is more than 1,400' deep and very clear. The range of colours was superb with faint yellow/blue/green in the shallows fading through a thousand shades to blue/black over the deepest parts. It may be the most beatiful thing I ever saw from an aircraft.

    • @Rancid-Jane
      @Rancid-Jane Год назад +49

      Wow! That was fun to read about.

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Год назад +81

      That sounds incredible!

    • @jonm.5216
      @jonm.5216 Год назад +11

      Hopefully one day I get the check out lake. It has such amazing history.

    • @sharkusvelarde
      @sharkusvelarde Год назад +7

      1400 feet?!!

    • @fraserhenderson7839
      @fraserhenderson7839 Год назад +28

      @@sharkusvelarde Yes, 1,456 feet at it's deepest. Very deep. There are giant lake trout there, the world's largest. The record line caught fish at 72 lbs and the largest caught in a gill net by indigenous fishers at 82 lbs. it is a huge lake with more than 2,200 miles of shoreline. Canada does lakes well. There are around a million there.

  • @corey57255
    @corey57255 Год назад +2468

    I think we can all agree that Lake of the Woods is an amazing name for a lake. I fully expect to find a fairy there.

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Год назад +159

      It does sound like that, you're right.

    • @jasonreed7522
      @jasonreed7522 Год назад +14

      There are other lakes of the same name, although they are WAY smaller. The kne near me is in the normal lake range of just a couple square miles and maybe 100ft deep.
      Now I'm curious what the actual average and median lake sizes are (volume, area, avg depth, and max depth using every lake in the world as the data set).

    • @MrAwesomeSaucem
      @MrAwesomeSaucem Год назад +40

      It’s absolutely beautiful in person. Totally wild with few exceptions. On windless day it can be so quiet it feels like you’re underwater. You should go if you ever get the chance :)

    • @hvitekristesdod
      @hvitekristesdod Год назад +5

      I’ve always wanted to visit. The Northwest Angle seems like a fascinating place

    • @fromYAHUSHAreborn91
      @fromYAHUSHAreborn91 Год назад +8

      Enchanted sword, maybe.

  • @johnmcgraw1475
    @johnmcgraw1475 Год назад +640

    I never knew how much I wanted to learn about obscure Canadian geography

    • @suckmyartauds
      @suckmyartauds Год назад +3

      Same! These lakes look so beautiful

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Год назад +28

      Glad I could help!

    • @yermom014
      @yermom014 7 месяцев назад +5

      You should check out the Nahanni Valley

    • @jimjimmers8571
      @jimjimmers8571 Месяц назад +1

      I love the little oddities of Canada, the Carcross Desert has to be my favourite

  • @AlternateHistoryHub
    @AlternateHistoryHub Год назад +160

    This is a very underappreciated channel. Glad your last vid exploded. Hope this one does too

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Год назад +22

      Thanks so much! I've been watching your videos for years, it makes me quite proud to have you commenting here on my channel.
      Obviously no obligation, but if you have any feedback or advice as a creator I'd love to hear what you have to say.

    • @Kattalanonyt
      @Kattalanonyt Год назад +6

      @@SignoreGalilei He probably gets so many replies that youtube flushes them out in his notifications. At a certain point youtube starts to selectively select which replies a person is notified about, and I doubt he will be notified about this one.

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Год назад +6

      @@Kattalanonyt Yeah, that seems likely. Thought it might be worth a shot though.

    • @chrish4439
      @chrish4439 8 месяцев назад

      ​@@SignoreGalilei The smallest great lake is Ontario which is almost 19000 square km. I think calling lakes that are only 2500sq/km a great lake is a little misleading lol

  • @LotzaCubes
    @LotzaCubes Год назад +400

    It’s nice to know more about these lakes as I remember gazing onto maps of Canada and always wonder why we were never taught about these lakes in general.

    • @jasonreed7522
      @jasonreed7522 Год назад +47

      Depending on where you went to school the 2 most likely reasons are that its not your country, and that most of this list is effectively the middle of nowhere so their are few cities or even settlements of note for anyone not from the area. (Basically they are too far away to care about, but not unique enough like the arctic and antarctic to be considered exotic and interesting)

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Год назад +53

      I think it would be cool to cover stuff like this in class. Even if they don't go over every individual lake, at least talk about why there are so many lakes here in the first place.

    • @juliaf_
      @juliaf_ Год назад +10

      @@jasonreed7522 we don't learn much about geography in general, so lakes that don't serve much purpose are pretty low priority lol
      The only lakes I learned about in school were the great lakes (though I live around Lake Ontario) and the Manicouagan reservoir/the eye of Quebec specifically because it's a crater

    • @davidrossi3914
      @davidrossi3914 Год назад +4

      Becouse there is nothing to learn, it's canada

    • @JohnsDough1918
      @JohnsDough1918 Год назад +21

      ​@@davidrossi3914 Wrong.

  • @debestcanadian
    @debestcanadian Год назад +137

    Going to my birthplace Manitoulin Island (the largest island in a lake on earth), we have Lake Manitou, the world's largest lake on an island in a lake. Then there's Treasure Island in Lake Mindemoya, which is the world's largest island in a lake on an island in a lake.

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Год назад +11

      Cool!

    • @BobbySanders-bf2fr
      @BobbySanders-bf2fr 7 месяцев назад +4

      My God.......

    • @crisptomato9495
      @crisptomato9495 7 месяцев назад

      Wow I’ve been to Manitoulin a couple of times and had no idea! It’s a gorgeous place.

    • @plazasta
      @plazasta 7 месяцев назад +3

      It keeps going for Canada lol. Nettilling lake was mentioned as the largest lake on an island in the world, but it also contains the largest lake on an island on a lake on an island iirc, and of course it contains the largest island on a lake on an island on a lake on an island in the world too!

    • @Cratercitysmith
      @Cratercitysmith 6 месяцев назад +2

      i remember when i was younger i would go to a relatives cottage on Manitoulin island and it had an amazing view of treasure island, it looked like a sleeping lady and i remember trying to get there in a paddleboat

  • @IMTENAZ
    @IMTENAZ Год назад +317

    9:45 Thank you for adding a lake from my country, an interesting thing about lake Nicaragua is that is the only lake in the world with fresh water sharks in it!

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Год назад +46

      That is an interesting thing, thanks!

    • @XxxXxx-fm3wo
      @XxxXxx-fm3wo Год назад +7

      with a canel built thought it cost to cost I expect it will become very damaged very fast. Harming biodiversity and salt leaves will also increase.

    • @IMTENAZ
      @IMTENAZ Год назад +25

      @@XxxXxx-fm3wo It would, That’s a reason most of us were against building a canal , it would have damaged the ecosystem of the zone, not to mention the deforestation it would cause.

    • @reidsimonson
      @reidsimonson Год назад +3

      From what I know for my Ichthyology studies is the there isn’t anything unique about the Bull sharks in Lake Nicaragua as this species exists widely and is also seen in the Mississippi and connected intercostals.

    • @reanbowlerd5988
      @reanbowlerd5988 Год назад +34

      @@reidsimonson its unique because its the only freshwater lake in the world that contains oceanic life such as sharks, swordfish, and tarpon. Bullsharks being able to go up the Mississippi doesnt discount anything from the sharks that live entirely within lake nicaragua because they typically dont remain in the Mississippi for long periods.

  • @zixder
    @zixder Год назад +42

    I feel like some of these lakes are often forgotten, but they have great historical importance, so this video really lets the public learn more about these lakes.

  • @m1gramme
    @m1gramme Год назад +118

    I first clicked on this as a Michigander thinking "There is no such thing as 'great lakes' other than our great lakes!" I stand humbly and gratefully corrected. Great video!

    • @jasonreed7522
      @jasonreed7522 Год назад +23

      Wait till you here about the ones in Africa. As an Upstate New Yorker I was shocked at the existence of a second set of "great lakes". (The African ones include lake Victoria, i think overall they are not nearly as impressive as ours though)

    • @TheSpecialJ11
      @TheSpecialJ11 Год назад +13

      When you consider Lake Michigan and Lake Huron are geologically just one big lake, and Lake Superior is a behemoth in itself, I'd say we're still top dogs though. Only the Caspian is comparable, but at a certain point it's just a true inland sea, bring in all respects a sea, just cut off from the world's oceans.

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Год назад +4

      Thanks! Glad I could expand your lake horizons there.

    • @stevenschofding1308
      @stevenschofding1308 Год назад +15

      @@TheSpecialJ11Can’t forget Lake Baikal holds 22-23% of surface fresh water and Lake Tanganyika is huge too…

    • @voretex4202
      @voretex4202 Год назад

      Same!!!

  • @lw256
    @lw256 Год назад +44

    I'm sure I'm not the only one who thought about this looking at the crazy lakes in Canada, so I looked it up. Apparently Lake Yathkyed in Nunavut has an island in it, which in turn has a lake on it, that itself contains an island, on which there's a lake...with an island in it.

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Год назад +7

      I did see that when I was doing the research, it's pretty cool. Maybe someone should sponsor an expedition there.

    • @johnearle1
      @johnearle1 Год назад +8

      Newfoundland is an island. It has a lake called Grand Lake. Within Grand Lake, there’s an island called Glover Island. Upon that island, there’s a lake. Within that lake, there’s yet another island. So, there’s an island in a lake on an island in a lake, on an island. Quite rare.

  • @markvicferrer
    @markvicferrer Год назад +23

    When I was a kid looking at a map of Canada, I was always confused why those 5 lakes clustered together were called the "Great Lakes", while two up north with the word "Great" literally in their names weren't.

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Год назад +6

      Yeah, that's part of why I did this video haha

  • @taxcollector511
    @taxcollector511 Год назад +239

    A video like this but on the lakes of europe would also be really intresting, the nordics and parts of russia have many glacial lakes like this

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Год назад +39

      Thanks for the suggestion, I'll make a note of that.

    • @adcraziness1501
      @adcraziness1501 Год назад +28

      The African Great Lakes are also very impressive.

    • @RockymountainRobert
      @RockymountainRobert Год назад +1

      Who asked you peter

    • @Tinil0
      @Tinil0 Год назад +4

      There are only 8 lakes that would qualify though sadly. Europe really doesn't really have any "great" lakes other than Ladoga.

    • @taxcollector511
      @taxcollector511 Год назад +2

      @@Tinil0 europe still has many amazing lakes, all over Finland, Sweden and Russia

  • @grantdickerson6103
    @grantdickerson6103 Год назад +139

    I absolutely been loving these high quality lake videos, bless up Signore!

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Год назад +7

      Thanks!

    • @dopeytripod
      @dopeytripod Год назад +6

      be sure to hit LAKE

    • @adaptercrash
      @adaptercrash Год назад

      Why do you ask such stupid questions they are great lakes because the depth, perhaps stop asking questions or maybe we needed to get rid of that question mark.

  • @janetrickwood2484
    @janetrickwood2484 Год назад +17

    I hitchhiked with a buddy up to Yellowknife from Calgary back in 1973. We wanted to go all the way to the mouth of the MacKenzie, but realised the futility as reality set in: as a 13 and 15 year old in the streets of a wild frontier town the truth dawned on us. Dang it was a fun trip, though! We met some amazing folks. Truckers, indigenous characters, Bible bashers! Man what a journey. I'd love to be young enough to want to do that again. Thanks for the vicarious voyage. That crazy waterway was a dream of a west to east voyage. I came back to Australia and never had the chance to do the great cross continental river voyage. I'm not having a whinge, but! Little Oz is a wonder all of its own and as my homeland leaves me in awe of its ancient beauty. I do regret not going across Canada in a canoe with my buddy all the same.

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Год назад +1

      Glad I could bring back some happy memories to you.

    • @keith6706
      @keith6706 Год назад +2

      You'd have never reached the mouth of the Mackenzie anyway, short of thumbing a ride on an aircraft or one of the barges. The only way there by land is through the Yukon via the Dempster Highway from Dawson to Inuvik, and that was only completed in 1978. Inuvik also happens to be well inland of the actual mouth, at the head of the delta, so to get to the actual coast (a bit past the mouth of the Mackenzie), you'd have to take the road from Inuvik to Tuktoyaktuk. The Tuk road was only finished in 2017.

  • @tobiasmathews4512
    @tobiasmathews4512 Год назад +40

    Lake of the woods also has an ice road during the winter. So during some months you can drive to and from the angle without going into Canada. This was an important connection during Covid with the border closures.

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Год назад +3

      Nice. A few people have mentioned that.

    • @Davidc9356
      @Davidc9356 Год назад

      Also a way to fall-in and drown or die from hypothermia.

    • @pogs9765
      @pogs9765 Год назад

      @@SignoreGalilei there’s also an ice road on lake Athabaska during the winter running from stony rapids to fond du lac and uranium city.

    • @CorePathway
      @CorePathway Год назад

      Good news for both people who live there 😘

  • @Phazon8058MS
    @Phazon8058MS Год назад +26

    Cool to hear someone talk about the many lakes of Manitoba! My family's got a cottage at Lake of the Woods on the Manitoba side of things. I've spent many summers out there, lot of great memories. I've been up to Lake Winnipeg a couple times, including a middle school science field trip where we spent the day on a research ship on the lake. Got on and off the boat at Gimli. I've been up to Lake Manitoba as well. My mom's family would take day trips to Lake Manitoba when she was a little girl and her family was still on the farm around that area. We most recently went up there as part of my grandpa's interment service. A lot of memories and connections for me to the waters of Manitoba.
    Some more fun facts about water in Manitoba, the Red River of the North (usually just called the Red River by Manitobans) is one of the rivers that feeds Lake Winnipeg. Where the Assiniboine River meets the Red is where you'll find the City of Winnipeg, the capital and largest city of the Province of Manitoba. As well, the region between Lake Winnipeg and Lake Manitoba is called the "Interlake" region.
    If you can't tell, I love Manitoba. Happy to see my home get a little time in the spotlight. Thanks. :)

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Год назад

      You're welcome, thanks for the story!

    • @ackkat2465
      @ackkat2465 Год назад

      lots of mosquitoes in Manitoba. especially lakes.

    • @Alaskancrabpuffs21
      @Alaskancrabpuffs21 9 месяцев назад

      My family owns land on the Minnesota side right where the Rainy River dumps into Lake of the Woods. We visit there every other year and the lake is such a good lake to swim in. Also it is good ice fishing too. Someday I will explore the Canadian side of the lake! It will be a fun exploration!

  • @faktablad
    @faktablad Год назад +29

    I appreciate this video as I'm fascinated by these lakes and the Canadian shield in general. I would have liked to see more non-aerial photos and more exploration of the geology, climate, flora and fauna around each lake. With just a satellite photo and surface area, it's hard to imagine what these lakes are actually like!

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Год назад +6

      Thanks for the feedback. Most of the lakes look pretty similar from the surface, but icier as they get farther north.

    • @diegopescia9602
      @diegopescia9602 Год назад +2

      I was too hoping to see the landscapes and features of the area around each one

  • @grimrot
    @grimrot Год назад +47

    A good idea for the next video might be to talk about some of the crater lakes! I was aware of the crater on reindeer lake but I'd love to know more about others! Love these videos they are great!

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Год назад +13

      Thanks for the suggestion, might be fun. There's a surprising number of lakes in craters.

    • @Josh-cw8by
      @Josh-cw8by Год назад +5

      West Hawk Lake in Manitoba.

    • @ungoyone
      @ungoyone Год назад +1

      I was wondering how many crater lakes exist.

    • @2009142
      @2009142 Год назад

      I think in Sask there's at least 3 crater impacts, the one in this video, one south and one elsewhere. I don't think the other 2 are lakes, but incase you didn't know :)

    • @morgan0
      @morgan0 Год назад

      i remember two mentions of craters in this video, one for the deepest point of some lake and another that’s like 99% island in the middle which has always fascinated me. would be cool to see a video on those (and any other crater lakes) in specific

  • @Leon-iv8ko
    @Leon-iv8ko Год назад +46

    I like how you covered some of the Dene’s Great Lakes. I’m fluent in the language and will share your video to my friends and family. Appreciate this video a lot and would like you to create a video about the Denes if you can. TuCho means big water in dene when translated to English

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Год назад +1

      Thanks! I can't guarantee any specific future videos, but it is a very interesting topic.

    • @CHEECHAM32
      @CHEECHAM32 Год назад

      Odi

    • @pogs9765
      @pogs9765 Год назад +1

      There are different versions of dene the words are the same but mean differently.

  • @Lunishta
    @Lunishta Год назад +9

    Thank you for talking about the Manitoban lakes!

  • @danachos
    @danachos Год назад +48

    Thank you!! The northern Great Lakes are oft-forgotten...
    Note on naming, the "Great Slave Lake" has a name that the local Dene nations abhor. There are big efforts to change the name away from 'slave'-related exonyms
    In the languages in whose country this lake is found, it is called "Tıdeè" in Tłı̨chǫ Yatıì, "Tinde’e" in Wıìlıìdeh Yatii / Tetsǫ́t’ıné Yatıé, "Tu Nedhé" in Dëne Sųłıné Yatıé, and "Tucho" in Dene Zhatıé
    Since they are quite distinct from each other, it is difficult to choose one of the mix. I have defaulted to using a botched version when using English or French: "Lake Tindé" because Yellowknife is the largest town on the lake and Yellowknife is in Tetsot'iné nęnę and Tłı̨chǫ Ndè (the names of the Yellowknife and Tlicho countries, respectively)
    Note on your explanation in the video. The Deh Cho Dene nation is just one of the four nations in whose territories this lake is found. Their language is Dene Zhatıé and their country is called Dené [Dháh] Ndéh or Deh Cho [Dené] Ndéh (check out "Denendeh," the pan-Dene country, for similarities in the name/etymology). The other three are the two aforementioned Tłı̨chǫ and Tetsǫ́t’ıné as well as the Dëne Sųłıné (whose country can be called Dënësųłinë́ Nëné).

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Год назад +8

      Thank you so much for this! I'm very much a geography generalist and don't know much of the detail of this specific area or its native history beyond what made it into the video. I'm responding on my phone right now but I'll add a note about this to the description when I get to a proper keyboard.

    • @HalifaxHercules
      @HalifaxHercules Год назад +3

      Mahsi Cho (common Navajo Dene/Northern Athabaskan word for "Big Thank You") for bringing this up David.
      On a personal note, my ex-girlfriend, Clara, is a Sahtu originally from Deline until she moved to Yellowknife at a young age.
      When the term Slavey was used around Clara, I found it a little offensive myself.
      Since I have Native American roots myself as I'm part Mi'kmaq from my maternal side, I know that the terms South Slavey and North Slavey in referring to peoples of the Deh Cho and Sahtu regions respectfully are offensive.
      Usually, Dene Zhatie and Sahtu are appropriate terms for Deh Cho and Sahtu Dene peoples.

    • @jfu5222
      @jfu5222 Год назад

      Thank you for an important geography lesson.

    • @42022coop
      @42022coop Год назад +3

      Mahsi from a Proud Dene Tha' member :) this is a good video thank you for correcting him 💜

    • @EatRadioWire
      @EatRadioWire Год назад +2

      Mahsi! I usually call it "the big lake" or Tucho. I like Tucho because it means big/great water in most local Dene dialects and because it matches with Dehcho.

  • @chrisbailey9377
    @chrisbailey9377 Год назад +16

    No they're just good lakes.

  • @mikelynch-zeroviewz2507
    @mikelynch-zeroviewz2507 Год назад +38

    It's crazy insane how many lakes there are in Canada 🇨🇦

    • @XxxXxx-fm3wo
      @XxxXxx-fm3wo Год назад +13

      Over 100,000 in just Manitoba alone. So many lakes in Ontario too that my grandfather even named one offically so, Grace Lake. Another unoffically Clairabell which is the tiny one just off it to the east. Grace was named after his first wife, and later he named one after my mother Claire. I believe another was Helena Lake unoffically so named for my grandmother. We still have a patented high grade gold claim in the area. The holding which can be purched or leased from my father of Grace Lake Holding. Anyone want a lot of gold?

    • @Rancid-Jane
      @Rancid-Jane Год назад +7

      There is always argument as to what constitutes a lake. Generally various definitions by area are used. Canada's lakes larger than three square kilometres being estimated at close to 31,752. Canada's area is about 9% lake surface.
      But the province I live in boasts 100,000 lakes, obviously that is a lake definition much smaller than 3 sq km. I did hear once what the minimum size was, I forget now, perhaps 50 acres in area.

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Год назад +1

      There's certainly a lot!

    • @mikelynch-zeroviewz2507
      @mikelynch-zeroviewz2507 Год назад +1

      @@XxxXxx-fm3wo that's awesome!!

    • @D95-d7y
      @D95-d7y Год назад +7

      More lakes in Canada than the rest of the world combined.

  • @gianfunk9121
    @gianfunk9121 Год назад +6

    Definitely Proud to be Canadian and living in such a beautiful place. As an avid fisherman I absolutely love living in manitoba and being on the water and having so many lakes to explore is a dream come true.

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Год назад

      That's awesome! Glad you're enjoying the lakes.

    • @gregkosinski2303
      @gregkosinski2303 7 месяцев назад

      It’s a shame with Trudeau has done to Canada.

    • @brandoninhofer6592
      @brandoninhofer6592 5 месяцев назад

      I'm from the US, but I like your country very much. Canada has been a great neighbour and friend to the US.

  • @adamleach471
    @adamleach471 Год назад +4

    I apricate your consistency and desire to have a concise compendium of information.

  • @silverjohn6037
    @silverjohn6037 Год назад +24

    Since you mentioned the meaning of several of the lake's names, Lake Manitoba is a supposedly an corruption of of Manitou Wa'ba or Spirit Voices. It refers to a formation of rocks that had particularly eerie sound when waves struck it in a storm.

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Год назад +1

      Cool! Thanks for sharing.

    • @SamuraiPoohBear
      @SamuraiPoohBear Год назад

      what rock formation?

    • @silverjohn6037
      @silverjohn6037 Год назад +1

      @@SamuraiPoohBear Never been there myself but it's supposedly north end of Lake Manitoba. Something I was taught back in high school back in the 70's.

  • @aiwwakk7152
    @aiwwakk7152 Год назад +6

    Canada's geography is just purely amazing.

  • @adrielvenne985
    @adrielvenne985 Год назад +11

    There should be a video on the city of Sudbury in Ontario. The city of lakes has over 300 lakes within it's borders and has the world's largest lake completely within one municipality.

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Год назад +2

      That sounds cool.

    • @frostyriffs
      @frostyriffs Год назад +1

      That would be Lake Wanapitei which was created by a meteor. That crash extended underground to the Temagami region and creating the Temagami Anomaly. Check it out for yourselves for some really cool facts about that entire area and pre Cambrian rock formation.

  • @RollyCoaster
    @RollyCoaster Год назад +21

    Darn, Yathkyed Lake in Nunavut doesn't meet the criteria. It's home to the only lake on an island in a lake on an island in a lake in the world. There's also an island inside that lake, which is another record.

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Год назад +1

      That's pretty neat.

    • @Chrishm0
      @Chrishm0 Год назад +1

      Somebody's been watching QI.....But is really quite interesting.

    • @RollyCoaster
      @RollyCoaster Год назад

      @@Chrishm0 actually, I just found the Wikipedia page on recursive lakes and islands lol

    • @TheUKNutter
      @TheUKNutter Год назад

      @@Chrishm0I believe Vsauce covered it as well, another channel with strange facts on it.

  • @kennethkundrik1056
    @kennethkundrik1056 Год назад +6

    Thank you for this, very interesting. I find it very interesting that most of the lakes are on an arc on the edge of the shield.

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Год назад +1

      It is pretty cool. I think it has to do with the glaciers ending there but I'm not 100% sure of the mechanism.

  • @ilzambongo
    @ilzambongo Год назад +8

    What a good job, Signore. Spettacolare! I'd love to fly above both Slave and Bear lakes. It'd be fascinating. Canada's geography is fascinating.

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Год назад

      Grazie! I agree, they must be very impressive lakes from the air.

  • @colinsteadland
    @colinsteadland Год назад +29

    The northwest angle can also be accessed by ice during the winter. Lake of the woods becomes one of the largest non-permanent highways in the country during the winter months

  • @dr.woozie7500
    @dr.woozie7500 Год назад +5

    Thanks for the knowledge on these lakes. There's barely any information on them, even Wikipedia has very short entries for them compared to the Great Lakes.

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Год назад

      You're welcome! The Canadian Encyclopedia helped out on some of these.

  • @sierratuccaro5051
    @sierratuccaro5051 Год назад +4

    Im so happy you mentioned lake athabasca as i live on the coast of it in a remote community 😊

  • @richardmiddleton4634
    @richardmiddleton4634 8 месяцев назад +2

    Lake Winnipeg is an incredibly dangerous lake to navigate in a storm. There are vast shallows with sand bars you can bottom out on and swamp your boat. it's great for fishing, but those frequent and fast moving summer thunderstorms on the prairies mean you have to keep your eye on the horizon.

  • @Ryan98063
    @Ryan98063 Год назад +5

    You may find the "bottomless" Gander Lake in Newfoundland interesting. It's 53 km long, only 2 km across and opinions vary but I have heard some say "not less than 800 feet deep"
    If it wasn't filled with water it would be a gaping canyon.

  • @WrenchBreaker
    @WrenchBreaker Год назад +1

    7:36 respect for actually learning the pronunciation of indigenous names

  • @williamlloyd3769
    @williamlloyd3769 Год назад +18

    Lake Corcoran is an ancient lake that covered the Central Valley of California. This lake would make an interesting video!
    PS - Thanks for producing this video on the other “great” lakes!

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Год назад +4

      Sounds like a cool ancient lake. And you're welcome!

  • @mathlover4994
    @mathlover4994 Год назад +18

    Knowing how small Canadas population is and how many Lakes they got, we can safely say Canada will never lack of water.

    • @Seeyeay
      @Seeyeay 8 месяцев назад

      Except our government allows nestle to buy up a lot of our water.

    • @Toocoolforyoutube1
      @Toocoolforyoutube1 8 месяцев назад

      Yet, we have many communities that lack potable water.

    • @GeorgeEarlAlvarezIII-xm2hk
      @GeorgeEarlAlvarezIII-xm2hk 8 месяцев назад

      All the means for integration or invasion

    • @corymoore2292
      @corymoore2292 8 месяцев назад +2

      But they only have one road in Canada which is why most of the lakes are fly in only.

    • @spytf2-pb3yo
      @spytf2-pb3yo 7 месяцев назад +3

      ​@@corymoore2292As a canadian, I can assure you that we have at least 3 roads

  • @adcraziness1501
    @adcraziness1501 Год назад +6

    They are all great lakes if you ask me. I got to see Newfoundland from the air once, there were so many lakes! It was amazing.

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Год назад +1

      It sounds amazing! It's a very cool landscape.

  • @straightupninja
    @straightupninja 6 месяцев назад

    The amount of geological activity is mind blowing and awesome!

  • @georgeheld1901
    @georgeheld1901 Год назад +4

    I’ve been doing research on the big but shallow reservoirs along the Missouri River, pretty cool to find a channel with some vids on lakes :)

  • @ironleegaming8227
    @ironleegaming8227 Год назад +4

    Yeah, we have lots of lakes in manitoba. It's pretty cool. We worked pretty hard on them.

  • @evergreenappreciator
    @evergreenappreciator Год назад +1

    I flew over Great Slave Lake while flying from the US east coast to Japan in mid November. Though the cabin was dimmed and everyone else was sleeping, flying west it was fully sunny and I couldn't help staring out the window. I had a blanket over me to block the light from everyone else! I could see the northeast arm with its many islands, all of the lesser pothole lakes were already frozen but that deep blue of the still-melted Slave lake I'll never forget. I could even see convection circles cracking/thinning the ice on the lesser frozen ponds. Absolutely mesmerizing and I hope to get up there someday!

    • @rb239rtr
      @rb239rtr 9 месяцев назад +1

      I grew up in Yellowknife, Hay River and further south, Fort Smith on the Slave River, but since, our entire family moved south. In 2007, we brought our mom's ashes to be buried in Ft Smith, we camped in Hay RIver, at a campground on Great Slave Lake. We saw some commercial fishing boats coming in, we knew where their docks are, went and bought fish off the boat. It was a good trip. It is definitely a place to visit.

  • @rogerballoujr.6244
    @rogerballoujr.6244 Год назад +4

    I was not expecting that Lake Champlain would be omitted from this list considering one of its nicknames is the 6th Great Lake.

    • @jono8181
      @jono8181 Год назад

      Champlain is in the previous video in this series.

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Год назад +1

      Yep, it's in the previous video.

    • @rogerballoujr.6244
      @rogerballoujr.6244 Год назад

      @@SignoreGalilei okay, stumbled on this vid by chance so had no idea Champlain was already discussed.

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Год назад

      @@rogerballoujr.6244 Totally fine! Just wanted to point you to somewhere you might want to look next :)

  • @ChicoDusty
    @ChicoDusty Год назад +2

    Great video! More lake videos please!

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Год назад

      Thanks! I'm not yet sure which topic will be next, but the lake videos have been doing pretty well and people seem to like them.

  • @DrachenGothik666
    @DrachenGothik666 Год назад +8

    Yay, first lake pictured (though not the 1st spoken about) was my own Lake Winnipeg! I grew up in the city of Winnipeg and we used to go up there every summer to swim and camp. Gorgeous wetlands, hiking, woodlands, and fishing. You could sometimes even see a faint display of the Northern lights in the summer if the sunspots were in an active year. I liked to think of Manitoba's three big lakes as our own Great Lakes system.💚

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Год назад

      That's awesome, glad I could show people your local lakes!

    • @sarougeau
      @sarougeau Год назад

      I still to go to Lake Manitoba every summer and I agree. Some of the best memories were canoeing/snowshoeing out in the marshes and seeing wildlife. There are lots of beaver damns in Lake Francis.

    • @brian8410
      @brian8410 Год назад +1

      Too bad about all the sewage that makes its way into that lake. By mid summer most of L Winnipegs 's beaches are warned for swim at own risk or not at all.

  • @jamespoker87
    @jamespoker87 Год назад +3

    Another good lake to have mentioned was Tulare Lake. It didn’t meet the size requirement but it was the largest lake west of the great lakes. (in the united states that is) It unfortunately dried up after its tributaries were diverted for agriculture.

  • @saw7191
    @saw7191 Год назад +2

    It’s great to see you get more views on your videos! Keep it up!

  • @oliverclothesoff5397
    @oliverclothesoff5397 Год назад +4

    The Hudson Bay should be considered a small ocean. It's massive. It almost looks like a huge lake

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Год назад +2

      It's also very shallow if I recall. It's quite a strange body of water.

    • @northlander4370
      @northlander4370 Год назад

      It is just Hudson Bay ...not :the" hudson bay

  • @toomanyjstoomanyrs1705
    @toomanyjstoomanyrs1705 Год назад +1

    Super interesting.
    Thank you.

  • @SylviusTheMad
    @SylviusTheMad Год назад +5

    I used to work with a guy who flew up to Lake Athabasca to go fishing every summer. He had a small plane, and while there are no airports in the region, there used to be. An abandoned runway at the ghost town of Uranium City is only partially overgrown, so he used to land there.
    At least that's the story he would tell. Now that I write it down it seems far-fetched.

    • @jono8181
      @jono8181 Год назад +1

      Uranium City airport is not abandoned and people still live there. It still has a regular scheduled flight from Rise Air.

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Год назад +1

      Yeah it's much smaller than it once was but it's not abandoned completely. Maybe he meant a different airport?

  • @thedarkgreenvanman
    @thedarkgreenvanman Год назад +1

    Absolutely incredible, I loved every minute of this

  • @austinschwartz7424
    @austinschwartz7424 7 месяцев назад +3

    I feel these should be called the good lakes not great just... good

  • @nornibres
    @nornibres 7 месяцев назад

    Loved this video. I am a resident of Manitoba and can tell you we refer to Lake Winnipeg as an inland sea. The views from Gimli MB. looking across the lake are spectacular. I met an American tourist a few years ago on the southern tip of Lake Manitoba at Delta beach looking north and marveling at the site. thanks for the video.

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  7 месяцев назад

      You're welcome! I'd love to see it myself some time.

  • @emp100k
    @emp100k Год назад +4

    I had for a long time noticed the strange amount of huge lakes lying in the USA and Canada along that north western diagonal line so I guess it is due to the Canadian shield and the glaciation that all these huge lakes are pretty much lined up a in a row?

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Год назад

      Yeah it's the edge of the glaciers and the type of rock exposed when they melted, as far as I understand it.

  • @sarougeau
    @sarougeau Год назад +2

    Lake manitoba is beautiful and I'd highly recommend Meindel park in twins beaches. The southern basin has lots of amazing marshland bordering it that is a wonderful sight year round.

  • @therealchimp1516
    @therealchimp1516 Год назад +4

    You have to hit the African Great Lakes next 🙏🏾

  • @piatra1277
    @piatra1277 Год назад +1

    Thank you for adding the metric system !

  • @alexlandsbergs
    @alexlandsbergs Год назад +4

    I feel like it would have been worth mentioning the athabaska sand dunes are the most northern sand dunes in the world. when people think of sand dunes, they think of the sahara. they dont think about some of the northern most part of saskatchewan lol. I know thats slightly off topic but still.

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Год назад +1

      They're the largest ones that far north but there are a few in Alaska that are further north.

  • @mytech6779
    @mytech6779 Год назад +2

    Being in a shallow formation(an ancient extra large lake bed), the Great Salt Lake has large fluctuations in surface area with small changes in depth. I went through there in the late 1990s and it was so full they were diverting water into the western salt desert to avoid flooding problems around the lake. The whole area that is normally used for land speed records was under about 6 inches of water.

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Год назад +1

      I read about that, it must have been so cool to actually see it!

  • @macafreshie
    @macafreshie Год назад +4

    VIBE BOMB

  • @Shawn666Hellion
    @Shawn666Hellion Год назад

    Any lake with a horizon is a huge lake,excellent video

  • @aaronmarks9366
    @aaronmarks9366 Год назад +4

    Those 4.25 billion year old rocks in the Canadian shield were already unimaginably ancient when the Cambrian explosion began. Totally mindblowing.

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Год назад +3

      Yeah! It's crazy how long this landmass has existed.

  • @copperthedragon870
    @copperthedragon870 Год назад +1

    What a fun way to start the morning!

  • @themightyeagle21
    @themightyeagle21 Год назад +8

    My favorite fact about the Caspian Sea and The Great Lakes is that the only reason that The Great Lakes aren’t seas is because they are salt water, and that the Caspian Sea is a Sea because it’s salt water. So if those two facts were swapped, things would be much different lol

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Год назад +3

      Maybe yeah. The Sea of Galilee is freshwater but honestly not sure there's a good reason that it's a sea at all besides just history.

    • @flare2000x
      @flare2000x Год назад +1

      I think technically the Caspian Sea should be the largest lake.

    • @blackwidowsm
      @blackwidowsm Год назад

      @@flare2000xIt is the largest lake, lake baikal, Siberia is largest by water volume. By land it’s the water acreage it’s Caspian Sea. Fresh water acreage is Lake Superior.

  • @johnearle1
    @johnearle1 Год назад +1

    Great Slave Lake and Great Bear Lake fill the residents of California and Arizona with champagne wishes and caviar dreams.

  • @appa609
    @appa609 Год назад +6

    Canada has the most and biggest lakes. It has more lakes than the rest of the world.
    You can almost define the territory of Canada as "the part of North America with a ton of glacial lakes"

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Год назад +2

      It is indeed one of Canada's defining features

    • @savannaha5038
      @savannaha5038 Год назад

      Well, the Caspian Sea is actually a lake! So not quite the biggest, but pretty close. The Aral sea was also bigger than any Canadian lake (I think) before it was dried up by the Soviets.

    • @jaquigreenlees
      @jaquigreenlees Год назад

      @@savannaha5038 The real reason Canada's lake are so fantastic is you can drink the water straight from almost all of them. Even now with the industrialization along most lakes the water is clean enough you can scoop it up in your hand and drink. That is a wealth many countries lack.

    • @grimrot
      @grimrot Год назад +5

      @@jaquigreenlees lol you're kind of exaggerating there... you might wanna filter that first, yes they are mostly free from chemical pollutants, but there are still all kinds of bacteria and parasites that you would want to filter out! I go backcountry camping in the Canadian Shield. Trust me I know hahah

    • @jasonreed7522
      @jasonreed7522 Год назад +2

      @@jaquigreenlees all water in the wilderness should be sterilized before consumption, it may be a low risk but its still a risk that any stream, pond, or lake has a harmful pathogen in it that can make you VERY sick. (A deer could have pooped in the water just around that bend in the creek upstream of where you are drinking, just boil your water first.)

  • @RealMajora
    @RealMajora Год назад +1

    Amazing sequel

  • @christiandevey3898
    @christiandevey3898 Год назад +4

    2:48 you said Continental US when I think you mean Contiguous. The difference is that Alaska is on the continent but not contiguous with the other states

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Год назад +1

      Well the Northwest Angle isn't contiguous with the rest of the 48. Maybe I should have said "48 contiguous states" or something though.

    • @christiandevey3898
      @christiandevey3898 Год назад

      @@SignoreGalilei It's as contiguous as, if not more than, places like long Island. Also I just remembered the term "Lower 48" witch would have worked

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Год назад

      @@christiandevey3898 Yeah, that might have worked.

  • @zmarc-
    @zmarc- 9 месяцев назад

    going backpacking by the manicouagan resevoir this march. super excited !!

  • @PBGetson
    @PBGetson Год назад +20

    It appears the Great Lakes, and arc of lakes across northern North America, and the Saint Lawrence Seaway, are stretch marks that will eventually become a new ocean. Eastern Canada may split away like Greenland and become a separate 'continent'.

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Год назад +8

      They've been a separate continent at times in the past, they might in the future too

    • @DinkyWaffle
      @DinkyWaffle Год назад +5

      they’re all glacial so no, they’re just in places that were glaciated during the last ice age and therefore cut deep enough to hold water

    • @PBGetson
      @PBGetson Год назад

      @@DinkyWaffle Think rift valley like in east Africa, but much wider, and slower forming. They're stretch marks.

    • @ericromano8078
      @ericromano8078 Год назад +6

      @@DinkyWaffle is right. They aren't stretch marks, the continent isn't splitting along that line. This is 100% a result of glaciers carving out the ground.

    • @benparrish9547
      @benparrish9547 Год назад +3

      Isn’t that area uplifting? Like the ice weighed the ground and compressed it so it’s slowly rising to its “natural” thawed position

  • @viracocha03
    @viracocha03 Год назад +2

    Very cool video. Glad I stumbled on the channel.
    I just moved to Nova Scotia from Ontario and man is there so many lakes around me, some really are "great" maybe not in size but definitely in beauty. I absolutely love this place. I lived a bit of a sheltered life tho, this move was the first time in my 37 years that I have ever left Ontario.

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Год назад +1

      Thanks! I've only been to Nova Scotia briefly (to visit the Joggins Fossil Cliffs) but the part where I was looked very beautiful.

    • @viracocha03
      @viracocha03 Год назад

      @@SignoreGalilei Thats awesome. I believe that is near Moncton, a couple hours north of me, close to some family friends. Looks like a very cool place to visit.
      Thanks for the response.

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Год назад +1

      @@viracocha03 You're welcome!

    • @WilliamAndrea
      @WilliamAndrea Год назад

      Yup, Dartmouth is the City of Lakes and it's just chock full of 'em. And then, notably there's Bras d'Or Lake (estuary) which is pretty darn big relative to the size of the province, and Kejimkujik, as dark as tea, with the national park.

  • @SupahTrunks7
    @SupahTrunks7 Год назад +4

    I, for one, support the renaming of “Great Slave Lake” to the indigenous name Tucho bc then I will finally be able to say the name of the lake without feeling weird

    • @Rancid-Jane
      @Rancid-Jane Год назад +1

      Some say it Slavey. But still it needs changed.

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Год назад +3

      Yeah. There's another commenter here who had some more information about the different indigenous names that people could use for it. It's the one who's mentioned in the bonus info in the description.

  • @spaceclouds5156
    @spaceclouds5156 Год назад +1

    you were at 9.99k subs when i started watching this video, now you are at 10k. Congrats

  • @jango7889
    @jango7889 Год назад +1

    9.99k subscribers as I type this, 10k very soon, you deserve it. Great content.

  • @AWSMcube
    @AWSMcube Год назад +2

    I've always been fascinated by the shape of Lake Mistassini in Quebec

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Год назад

      It's really an odd shape, yeah. It's at the edge of some igneous rock formations but I'm not sure exactly why it got so long and skinny.

  • @JadeLoney-qs6ob
    @JadeLoney-qs6ob 16 дней назад

    wonderful watch. thank you

  • @junkandcrapamen
    @junkandcrapamen 8 месяцев назад +1

    Canoeing through the islands near Yellowknife on Great Lake Tucho at midnight in July will change your life.

  • @daniel-johnson_dam
    @daniel-johnson_dam Год назад +1

    Thank you for mentioning my lake

  • @carsonwieker
    @carsonwieker Год назад

    Great video and research, thank you, cheers!

  • @CanadaBricks
    @CanadaBricks Год назад +1

    A Sequel! I was hoping for one!

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Год назад +1

      Glad you like it! A lot of people in the comments had more lakes they wanted to hear about so I decided to go for it.

  • @scottstobbe
    @scottstobbe Год назад

    Great video. Some non-aerial photos/videos of these lakes would have been a nice touch.

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Год назад +1

      A few people have commented about that, yeah. Might be good for the future.

  • @4945three
    @4945three Год назад

    Water, water every where. Thank you for sharing your gift of understanding the magnificence of creation.

  • @randomandology
    @randomandology Год назад

    Interesting, thank you
    Cool vid,well done

  • @DrNutbag
    @DrNutbag Год назад

    Great video! I came simply to hear about the lakes of my beautiful home of Manitoba. It’s a point of pride to me to point to a map of people that have never heard of it and they see the inland seas and 100,000 lakes.

  • @carsonreed1968
    @carsonreed1968 Год назад +1

    Never ever heard someone not from Saskatchewan pronounce it correctly, nice job!

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Год назад +2

      Thanks! It took some googling but looks like I got it.

  • @andrewlast1535
    @andrewlast1535 Год назад

    I’ve fished Slave several times and briefly was at Bear. All I can think of is how the fishing is in all these lakes and how much they have been explored? Such an amazing place.

    • @Alaskancrabpuffs21
      @Alaskancrabpuffs21 9 месяцев назад +1

      As someone who has fished Lake of the Woods extensively I can't imagine the fishing in some of the remote lakes in Ontario and Manitoba. Let alone the lakes in the territories. Probably world class fishing there.

    • @andrewlast1535
      @andrewlast1535 9 месяцев назад

      @@Alaskancrabpuffs21 I have never been to Lake of the Woods. It has been on my bucket list forever.

  • @richardglady3009
    @richardglady3009 Год назад

    Thank you for another great geography lesson. You got a new subscriber.

  • @devonmanik127
    @devonmanik127 Год назад +1

    Awesome vid! You should cover Lake Hazen on northern Ellesmere Island! It’s almost at the North Pole

  • @vvxsdfczdy9888
    @vvxsdfczdy9888 Год назад

    How cow dude totally have so much respect that you actually listen and chat back to your subscribers is amazing

    • @SignoreGalilei
      @SignoreGalilei  Год назад

      Thanks! It's getting a little harder with the number increasing but I'll still try my best.

  • @6974
    @6974 Год назад

    thank you for talking about lake Diefenbaker

  • @TheDecree93
    @TheDecree93 Год назад

    Cool video idea!

  • @gryph01
    @gryph01 Год назад +1

    Fun fact. There is a houseboat community on Great Slave Lake. They were featured in a documentary series a few years back.

  • @tiae.475
    @tiae.475 Год назад

    Great video!👍🏻

  • @owen9175
    @owen9175 Год назад

    Excellent video

  • @BCBennyCAN2
    @BCBennyCAN2 7 месяцев назад +1

    Lake Quesnel in BC in the second deepest lake in North America, Great Bear is the deepest.

  • @craigcrawford6749
    @craigcrawford6749 Год назад

    I used to work at Wollaston as a carpenter in the 80's. Flew in and out of a small bush landing strip on an Indian reservation. Or on float planes. Loved it

  • @jayteegamble
    @jayteegamble Год назад +1

    It's interesting that Winnipeg means 'murky water' in Cree. Minnesota means 'cloudy water' in Dakota. Similar soil, i'd imagine.

  • @Usurper123
    @Usurper123 Год назад

    I hope you're happy. Your attempt at pronouncing a French name was good enough to get me a French ad for Avatar 2 on this video.