Jump In the Lake music video ⚠️☣️
Directed/animated by
@shramptv
Recorded/mixed by Shannon Connor
Vox/guitar: Cal Pocernich
Bass: Shelby Len
Drum: Luis Acosta Jr.
Story idea: Luis Acosta Jr.
YouTube link in bio 🫂
what i found when i goggled ‘crazy lake facts’:
“Once formed, lakes do not stay the same. Like people, they go through different life stages—youth, maturity, old age, and death.
All lakes are either open or closed. If water leaves a lake by a river or other outlet, it is open. All freshwater lakes are open. If water only leaves a lake by evaporation, the lake is closed. Closed lakes usually become saline (salty). This is because as the water evaporates, it leaves behind solids—mostly salts.
Like oceans, lakes naturally stratify, forming layers of warmer water above, and cooler water layers below. But too much lake stratification isn’t a good thing, limiting mixing, which allows oxygen to reaches below and cooler water temps to reaching the upper layers for reliant aquatic species. Weather like wind and rain, as well as water flow from tributaries that’s needed to mitigate lake stratification are being impacted by climate change, leaving lakes’ ecosystems high and dry, literally sometimes.
The Great Salt Lake, in the U.S. state of Utah, is the largest saline lake in North America.
The lowest lake in the world is the Dead Sea. The surface level is 418 m below sea level.
The highest lake in the world is the crater lake of Ojos del Salado, on the border of Chile and Argentina at 6,390 m above sea level.
The deepest lake in the world is Lake Baikal in Siberia, Russia, it is 1,637 m at its deepest point.
The longest lake in the world is Lake Tanganyika in Africa at 660 km and it is also the second deepest lake.
The Great Lakes shared by the US and Canada include 5 lakes and contain around 21% of the world’s freshwater supply.
Lake Superior is the largest of the Great Lakes and has the largest surface area of any freshwater lake in the world at 82,000 km².
Finland has the nickname ‘Land of the Thousand Lakes’ as there are over 187,000 lakes in the country.
But Canada has Finland beat, with almost 2 million lakes.”