Kettle hole
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A kettle hole is a geological feature formed by receding glaciers. When an ice sheet retreats, several large portions may become detached, surrounded by mounds of soil. As the ice melts, a depression called a kettle hole remains. When water occupies the depression, it may be called a kettle lake.
List of kettle holes
- Ell Pond in Rhode Island
- Fresh Pond, Cambridge, Massachusetts
- Spruce Hole Bog in New Hampshire
- Lake Ronkonkoma on Long Island, New York
External link
- Geological definition of a kettle hole (http://www.uwsp.edu/geo/faculty/ritter/glossary/h_k/kettle_hole.html) from the University of Wisconsin