List of prehistoric lakes
This a partial list of prehistoric lakes. Although the form of the names below differ, the lists are alphabetized by the identifying name of the lake. YBP = Years Before Present.
North America
[Endorheic basin]s
- Tularosa basin
- * Lake Otero
- * Lake Lucero; present day
Atlantic Drainage
- St. Lawrence River drainage, i.e., the Great Lakes
- * Champlain Sea; 11,800 – 8,200 YBP on the lower St. Lawrence, from Ottawa River to the Gulf of St. Lawrence
- * Lake Ontario basin: 8,400 YBP
- ** Early Lake Ontario; 8,700 – 11,800 YBP
- ** Lake Admiralty; 10,000 YBP
- ** Lake Frontenac; 12,000 – 11,000 YBP covering the Ontario basin and to the northeast up the St. Lawrence Valley covering the low lands north to the Ottawa River and Montreal.
- ** Glacial Lake Iroquois; 13,000 – 10,500 YBP and covered all of the Ontario basin and southward across central New York, reaching to the Finger Lakes.
- *Finger Lakes of New York plus 12 minor lakes
- **Dansville Lake in the Canaseraga valley
- **Scottsburg Lake in the Conesus valley
- **Naples Lake in the Canandaigua valley
- **Hammondsport Lake in the Keoka valley.
- **Watkins Lake in the Seneca valley
- **Ithaca Lake in the Cayuga valley
- *Lake Erie basin
- ** Early Lake Erie; 11,800 – 8,700 YBP in Ohio, Ontario, Michigan, Pennsylvania, and New York and located in the Erie basin
- ** Lake Lundy; 2,000 YBP in Ohio, Ontario, Pennsylvania, and New York
- ** Lake Elkton stage of Lake Lundy @ above sea level
- ** Lake Dana stage of Lake Lundy @ above sea level
- ** Lake Grasmere stage of Lake Lundy @ above sea level
- ** Lake Tonawanda; 10,000 YBP in western New York
- ** Lake Wayne; ended by 12,000 YBP in Ohio, Pennsylvania, and New York, expanding from Lake Warren to cover most of the Erie basin
- ** Lake Warren; 12,700 YBP in Ohio, Pennsylvania, and New York, covering southern portion of the basin
- ** Lake Whittlesey; 13,000 – 12,700 YBP in Ohio, Ontario, Michigan, and Pennsylvania. It covered the western half of the Erie basin and north over southwest Ontario to the tip of Lake Huron.
- ** Lake Arkona; 13,600 – 13,200 YBP in Ohio, Ontario, Michigan, and Pennsylvania. Covered two-thirds of the Erie basin, north across southwest Ontario to include the southern tip of Lake Huron, the ‘thumb’ of Michigan and low lands south and west of Saginaw Bay.
- ** Lake Maumee; 14,000 – 13,000 YBP in Ohio, Ontario and Michigan. The western basin reaching to Fort Wayne, Indiana.
- * Lake Rouge in Michigan south of Detroit.
- * Lake St. Clair and the Detroit River:
- ** Early Lake St. Clair: 12,500 – 5,500 YPB in Lake St. Clair; Michigan and Ontario.
- * Lake Huron basin
- ** Later Lake Saginaw in Saginaw Bay on the lower peninsula of Michigan.
- ** Nipissing Great Lakes; 5,500 - 4,500 YBP
- **Lake Nipissing; 8,400 – 5,500 YBP formed as the water bodies in the Superior and Huron basins merged across Sault Ste. Marie around 8,4000 YBP and then merged with the Michigan basin around 7,800.
- **Lake Stanley-Hough; 8,700 YBP, the water levels had risen to connect both Lake Stanley and Lake Hough into a single body of water.
- **Lake Stanley; 9,000 YBP covered only the northern and eastern portion of the main Huron basin with channels into Lake Hough.
- **Lake Hough; 9,000 YBP covered Georgian Bay, Ontario.
- ** Glacial Lake Algonquin; 9,000 – 7,000 YBP
- ** Lake Stanley; to 10,000 YBP
- ** Lake Saginaw; 13,500 YBP 10,300 YBP along the southern shore of Saginaw Bay and the low lands to the southwest.
- * Lake Michigan basin
- ** Nipissing Great Lakes: 5,500 - 4,500 YBP
- **Lake Nipissing; 8,400 – 5,500 YBP formed as the water bodies in the Superior and Huron basins merged across Sault Ste. Marie around 8,4000 YBP and then merged with the Michigan basin around 7,800.
- ** Glacial Lake Algonquin; 9,000 – 7,000 YBP
- ** Lake Chippewa; 10,700 – 7,500 YBP, covered the lowest elevations in the Lake Michigan basin forming a linear lake in the middle, linked by a narrow proto-Straits of Mackinac and the Mackinac Falls to Lake Stanley.
- ** Lake Chicago; 14,000 – 11,000 YBP along the southern shore and growing slowly northward.
- *Lake Superior basin
- ** Precursor Lakes, before the formation of basin wide bodies of water.
- *** Lake Ashland
- *** Lake Brule
- *** Lake Nemadji
- *** Lake Ontonagon
- *** Lake St. Louis
- ** Nipissing Great Lakes: 8,400 – 5,500 YBP formed as the water bodies in the Superior and Huron basins merged across Sault Ste. Marie around 8,4000 YBP and then merged with the Michigan basin around 7,800.; - 5,500; - 4,500 YBP
- ** Lake Houghton; 8,700 – 8,000 YBP covered the Superior basin in Ontario, Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Michigan.
- ** Fenton Lake; 9,500 YBP occupied a shallow basin in the eastern side of Lake Superior after Lake Minong had shrunk below rock sills internal to the lake basin.
- ** Lake Minong; 10,300 – 9,800 YBP covering most of the modern Superior basin.
- **Post-Duluth Lake; 10,600 YBP along the Wisconsin and Michigan shore, reaching less than halfway across the basin.
- ** Lake Duluth; 11,500 – 11,000 YBP in the western half of the Superior basin.
- ** Glacial Lake St. Louis occupied St. Louis Bay at the southern tip of modern Lake Superior.
- ** Lake Keweenaw; 12,500 – 12,000 YBP in the western Superior basin.
- Atlantic Ocean
- * Lake Albany in the valley of the Hudson River.
- * Glacial Lake Block Island off the south coast of Rhode Island, west of Block Island.
- * Glacial Lake Cape Cod in Massachusetts.
- * Lake Colebrook on the border of Vermont and New Hampshire, crossing into Quebec.
- * Lake Coos on the border of Vermont and New Hampshire.
- * Lake Connecticut; 20,000 – 18,000 YBP, covered Long Island Sound.
- * Glacial Lake Hitchcock; 15,000 YBP in the valley of the Connecticut River.
- * Glacial Lake Nantucket Sound in Massachusetts.
- * Glacial Lake Narragansett covered Narragansett Bay in Rhode Island.
- * Lake Merrimack in New Hampshire in the Merrimack River valley
- * Lake Passaic; 19,000 – 14,000 YBP in New Jersey
- * Glacial Lake Rhode Island off the south coast of Rhode Island, east of Block Island
- * Lake Sciota; in the eastern Poconos Pennsylvania.
- * Lake Stowe; 15,000 YBP in central Vermont.
- * Lake Vermont in Vermont, New York states, and the province of Quebec.
- * Lake Winooski in Vermont.
- * Lubbock Lake in Texas
Gulf of Mexico Drainage
- Mississippi River basin
- * Glacial Lake Calvin in southeast Iowa
- Illinois River basin
- *Lake Baroda in Michigan on the lower St. Joseph River.
- * Lake Dowagiac in Michigan on the lower Dowagiac River., now a branch of the St. Joseph River which now flows into Lake Michigan.
- * Lake Madron in Michigan at the junction of the St. Joseph River and the Dowagiac River.
- * Lake Kankakee; 13,600 – 13,200 YBP
- * Glacial Lake Ottawa in Illinois on the upper Illinois River.
- * Glacial Lake Pontiac in Illinois on the lower Vermillion River.
- * Glacial Lake Wauponsee in Illinois at the headwaters of the Illinois River.
- * Lake Watseka in Illinois on the Iroquois River.
- Ohio River basin
- * Lake Monongahela, along the Allegheny, Monongahela and upper Ohio Rivers.
- * Glacial Lake Tight, named for William G. Tight along the Ohio and West Virginia border.
- Upper Mississippi River basin
- * Lake Upham north of Duluth, Minnesota.
- * Lake Aitkin along the Mississippi River near Grand Rapids, Minnesota.
- * Lake Minnesota at the great bend in the Minnesota River at Mankato, Minnesota
- * Glacial Lake Baraboo, communicating with Glacial Lake Wisconsin
- * Glacial Lake Grantsburg, draining through the St. Croix River,
- *Lake Oshkosh; 13,600 - YBP. on the central Wisconsin River.
- * Glacial Lake Wisconsin; 18,000 – 14,000 YBP in Wisconsin along the Wisconsin River.
- Missouri River basin
- * Glacial Lake Great Falls; 17,000 – 13,000 YBP in Montana near Great Falls, Montana.
- * Lake Cut Bank in Montana on the Marias River near Cut Bank.
- * Lake Chouteau in Montana
- * Lake Musselshell in Montana on the Musselshell River.
- * Lake Jordan in Montana
- * Lake Circle in Montana,
- * Lake Glendive in Montana on the Yellowstone River, unstream from its junction with the Missouri River.
- * Lake Crow Flies High in North Dakota between Williston and New Town.
- * Lake McKenzie in North Dakota from the Great Bend, south to the South Dakota border.
- Rio Grande River basin
- * Lake Alamosa in Colorado
Arctic Drainage
- MacKenzie River basin
- *Lake MacKenzie in the Northwest Territories.
- * Lake McConnell; 11,800 – 8,400 YBP
- * Lake Agassiz; 12,875 – 8,480 YBP in Manitoba and Ontario, stretching south in the James River valley of North Dakota and Minnesota.
- *Modern: Lake Winnipeg, Cedar Lake, Lake Winnipegosis, Lake Manitoba, Lake of the Woods
- ** Lake Edmonton in Alberta
- ** Lake Peace in Alberta and British Columbia
- ** Lake Regina
- ** Lake Hind in southwestern Manitoba
- ** Lake Souris across North Dakota and Manitoba
- * Hudson Bay drainage
- ** Tyrell Sea; 7,000 – 6,000 YBP
- ** Lake Ojibway; 8,500 – 8,200 YBP
- ** Lake Antevs
- ** Lake Nakina in Ontario, east of Lake Nipigon
Pacific Drainage
- Pacific Ocean:
- * Lake Atna drained from present-day Copper River Basin
- * Glacial Lake Bretz drained north from present-day Puget Sound in Washington
- * Lake Cahuilla in Southern California at the Salton Sea and today's cities of Indio, Mexicali, and El Centro, CA
- *Glacial Lake Hood formed in the southern hook of the Hood Canal and drained south through Glacial Lake Russell at Tacoma and the Black River Valley to the Chehalis River.
- *Lake Modoc formed on the Klamath River, at Upper Klamath Lake, Lower Klamath Lake and Tule Lake
- *Lake Nisqually preceded Lake Russell and waters, west of Tacoma, including the Narrows.
- *Lake Puyallup was on the middle and upper Puyallup River and preceded Lake Tacoma.
- * Glacial Lake Russell drained south from present-day Puget Sound in Washington.
- * Glacial Lake Sammamish preceded Lake Sammamish, draining into Glacial Lake Russell’s bay in the Lake Russell’s bay in the Lake Washington basin east of Seattle.
- *Lake Skokomish drained the southeast flank of the Olympic Mountains in the Skokomish River basin.
- Lake Tacoma was at the southern end of the Vashon Glacier in Puget Sound covering Commencement Bay, extending south up the Puyallup River valley. Washington basin east of Seattle.
- * Glacial Lake Snoqualmie in Washington State
- Columbia River basin:
- * Lake Allison; 15,000 – 13,000 YBP in the Willamette Valley of Oregon.
- * Lake Canadian on the Washington/Oregon border above the Dalles
- * Lake Lahontan; 12,700 – 9,000 YBP in Nevada, California and Oregon.
- * Glacial Lake Columbia in central Washington State
- * Glacial Lake Spokane in eastern Washington near Spokane.
- * Lake Lewis; 16,000 YBP in central Washington, new Yakima.
- * Lake Missoula; 15,000 – 13,000 YBP in western Montana.
- Great Basin of California, Nevada, Utah, Oregon & Idaho:
- * Lake Alvord in Oregon and Nevada
- * Lake Amboy in California
- * Lake Bonneville; 32,000 – 14,500 YBP in Utah and Idaho and Nevada.
- * Lake Carpenter in Nevada
- * Lake Chewaucan in Oregon
- * Lake Clover in Nevada
- * Lake Dixie in Nevada
- * Lake Franklin in Nevada
- * Lake Harney-Malheur in Oregon
- * Lake Klamath in California and Oregon
- * Lake Madeline in California
- * Lake Manly; 186,000 – 10,000 YBP, covered Death Valley
- * Lake Mojave in California
- * Lake Owens in California
- * Lake Panamint in California
- * Lake Railroad in Nevada
- * Lake Russell in Nevada and California
- * Lake Searles in California
- * Lake Spring in Nevada
- * Lake Steptoe in Nevada
- * Lake Tecopa
- * Lake Thompson
- * Lake Toiyabe in Nevada
- * Lake Tulare in California
- * Lake Tule in California
- * Lake Waring in Nevada
Europe
- Lake Komi, a proglacial lake formed in the vicinity of the present-day Russian Komi Republic
- Baltic Ice Lake, freshwater period of the Baltic Sea
- Ancylus Lake, freshwater period of the Baltic Sea
- Lake Harrison in the Midlands in England
- Lake Lapworth in Shropshire in England
- Lake Orcadie of the Old Red Sandstone, Scotland
- Lake Pickering between the North York Moors and the Yorkshire Wolds in England
- Ebro endorheic lake system, in the Ebro Basin,
- Duero endorheic lake system, in the Duero Basin,
- Gjende Lake in the Jotunheimen mountains of Norway
- Zechstein Sea covering all of central and Northern Europe
South America
- Altiplano Cundiboyacense
- * Lake Humboldt, Pleistocene lake on the Bogotá savanna
- Altiplano Boliviano
- * Cabana, a lake level highstand of Lake Titicaca
- * Lake Escara
- * Inca Huasi
- * Mataro, a lake level highstand of Lake Titicaca
- * Lake Minchin
- * Ouki
- * Sajsi
- * Salinas
- * Lake Tauca
- * Cancosa paleolake
- Patagonia
- * Great Tehuelche Paleolake
Asia
- West Siberian Glacial Lake
- Lake Bandung in Indonesia
- Lake Tengger
Africa
- Lake Makgadikgadi in the Kalahari Desert in Africa
- Lake Ptolemy
- Chad Basin what is now Lake Chad
- Lake Congo
- Lake Suguta
Oceania
- Lake Carpentaria, Australia
- Lake Bungunnia in the Murray Basin, Australia
- Eromanga Sea in the Eromanga Basin, Australia
- Lake Manuherikia, Central Otago, New Zealand
- Lake Walloon, Lake Winton, and Lake Dieri, Australia, of which the modern Lake Eyre is a remnant