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Ontario, Lake

Ontario, Lake, 7,540 sq mi (19,529 sq km), 193 mi (311 km) long and 53 mi (85 km) at its greatest width, between SE Ont., Canada, and NW N.Y.; smallest and lowest of the Great Lakes. It has a surface elevation of 246 ft (75 m) above sea level and a maximum depth of 778 ft (237 m). Lake Ontario is fed chiefly by the waters of Lake Erie by way of the Niagara River; other tributaries are the Genesee, Oswego, and Black rivers in New York and the Trent River in Ontario. The lake is drained to the northeast by the St. Lawrence River. Oceangoing vessels reach the lake through the St. Lawrence Seaway and use the Welland Canal to bypass Niagara Falls and reach Lake Erie; smaller craft (mostly pleasure boats) can travel the Rideau Canal between Kingston and Ottawa, and the Trent Canal between the Bay of Quinte and Georgian Bay. Navigation on the lake is not usually impeded by ice in winter. The chief Canadian lakeshore cities are St. Catharines, Hamilton, Toronto, Oshawa, and Kingston; on the south shore are Rochester and Oswego, N.Y. Commercial fishing is important, but pollution has been a problem. A U.S.-Canadian pact (1972) established that water quality would be improved and further pollution ended. Recreational facilities are provided at state and provincial parks. The first European to see (1615) Lake Ontario was Étienne Brulé, the French explorer; later that year Samuel de Champlain visited it.

The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, 6th ed. Copyright © 2012, Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.

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Water quality changes in south-central Ontario lakes and the role of local factors in regulating lake response to regional stressors.(Report) (Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences)

A comparison of pre-industrial and present-day changes in Bosmina and Daphnia size structure from soft-water Ontario lakes.(Report) (Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences)

Long-term trends in zooplankton of Dorset, Ontario, lakes: the probable interactive effects of changes in pH, total phosphorus, dissolved organic carbon, and predators (1).(Report) (Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences)

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Naval battles on Lake Ontario: the battle of the carpenters: while Britain's Royal Navy ruled the ocean waves during the War of 1812, the fledgling American navy was able to challenge their supremacy on the Great Lakes.(WAR of 1812) (Esprit de Corps)

Long-Term Water Quality Changes in a Multiple-Stressor System: A Diatom-Based Paleolimnological Study of Lake Simcoe (Ontario, Canada) (Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences)

Province reviewing working group's proposed initiatives. (Northern Ontario; Elliot Lake and Area Working Group's economic proposals) (Northern Ontario Business)

Effects on periphyton and macroinvertebrates from removal of submerged wood in three Ontario lakes. (Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences)

Estimating calcium weathering rates and future lake calcium concentrations in the Muskoka-Haliburton region of Ontario (1).(Report) (Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences)

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