Rainy Cloud Pictures

Rainy Lake is a freshwater lake with a surface area of 360 square miles that straddles the border between the United States and Canada. The Rainy River issues from the west side of the lake. Today it is harnessed to make hydroelectricity for US and Canadian locations. International Falls, Minnesota and the much smaller city of Ranier, Minnesota are situateā€¦
Rainy Lake is a freshwater lake with a surface area of 360 square miles that straddles the border between the United States and Canada. The Rainy River issues from the west side of the lake. Today it is harnessed to make hydroelectricity for US and Canadian locations. International Falls, Minnesota and the much smaller city of Ranier, Minnesota are situated opposite Fort Frances, Ontario, on either side of the Rainy River. Rainy Lake and Rainy River establish part of the boundary between the US state of Minnesota and the Canadian province of Ontario.
  • Location: Minnesota, United States; · Ontario, Canada
  • Primary inflows: Namakan Lake · Kabetogama Lake · Seine River
  • Primary outflows: Rainy River
  • Basin countries: Canada, United States
  • Max. length: 80 km (50 mi)
  • Max. width: 48 km (30 mi)
  • Surface area: 932 km² (360 sq mi)
  • Skyline Rainy Clouds Images - Shutterstock.com

    https://www.shutterstock.com ā€ŗ royalty-free ā€ŗ stock-images
    AdBoost Your Brand's Digital Presence Now ā€” Get Authentic Local Images for Targeted Results. Subscribe Today and Get Industry-Leading Content, Support and Licensing. Get Started Now!
    Site visitors: Over 100K in the past month

    Business & Finance Photos · AI-Recommended Images · Creative Intelligence

  • Rainy clouds" in images

    https://stock.adobe.com
    AdTry Adobe Stock with a 30-day free trial. Access any asset type, all in one subscription. Seamless integration within Creative Cloud apps to simplify workflow.

    Curated by experts · Integrated in Adobe apps · Video now available

    Types: Business and healthcare, Authentic lifestyle, Science and technology
Data from: en.wikipedia.org