I know the bottom of Georgian Bay foot by foot ( well, along the shore line)
30,000 islands, 3 million rocks, and a life time of boating
You are grasping at straws. Toronto is not located in the Grand Canyon.
If you drained Lake Ontario, it would sure look like it's beside it.
Not quite deep enough. Ontario is one of the shallower of the Great Lakes and the drop would be gradual, not sudden.
Not according to Post # 31!![]()
This was the start of the conversation.
B.S. was incorrect in post #31 but that doesn't change the topic was originally about the Grand Canyon.
Ummmmmmmmmm NO! The topic was originally about Houston and Toronto!
I'm not quite sure W.T.F. Toronto has anything to do with this situation anymore than say Calgary, Winnipeg or Yellowknife!![]()
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Not quite deep enough. Ontario is one of the shallower of the Great Lakes and the drop would be gradual, not sudden.
It was the Great Lakes you were making the comparison with!
Read my original reply and stop making things up.
I'm not making f**k all up, it's all here in black and white!![]()
Apparently you are black-white colour blind.
Your original reply..........................."Water does flow away you know, and Houston got 1000 mm not 50 meters."......................Not a peep about the Grand Canyon.![]()
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The nice thing about forums is that you can backtrack your original post. Check post #31. And then stop trying to weasel out of your error.
Explain that, and quit moving the goal posts and talk your way out of it...Not quite deep enough. Ontario is one of the shallower of the Great Lakes and the drop would be gradual, not sudden.
The facts
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Depth
283 ft / 86 m average
802 ft / 244 m maximum
https://www.glerl.noaa.gov/education/ourlakes/lakes.html
You'll note the relativity steep drop off shore, and the total depth is actually quite deep.
and it looks like Ontario is the second deepest (average) great lake after Lake Superior
Somebody was making stuff up again.
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