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Definition of Lake Cayuga
1. Noun. A glacial lake in central New York; the longest of the Finger Lakes.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Lake Cayuga
Literary usage of Lake Cayuga
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. America, Historical, Statistic, and Descriptive by James Silk Buckingham (1841)
"Passage by Bridge over the Lake Cayuga.—Village built on the Seneca Falls.—Pass
through Waterloo to Geneva. ON Tuesday, the 7th of August, we quitted the ..."
2. The American Geologist: A Monthly Journal of Geology and Allied Sciences by Newton Horace Winchell (1904)
"... Ten years ago I published a papert stating evidence that seemed to me to prove
an origin by glacial erosion for the basin occupied by Lake Cayuga. ..."
3. A Pedestrian Tour of Two Thousand Three Hundred Miles in North America: To by Philip Stansbury (1822)
"... to view in the deep ravines and chasms of the streams. My time passed pleasantly
upon a spot so delightful as the banks of the beautiful Lake Cayuga. ..."
4. The American Naturalist by American Society of Naturalists, Essex Institute (1894)
"In studying the origin of Lake Cayuga, Mr. RS Tarr, has become a convert to ...
This the author holds to be proof positive that Lake Cayuga is a rock-basin. ..."
5. The Journal of Geology by University of Chicago Department of Geology and Paleontology (1904)
"It is very probable that the anticline crossing Lake Cayuga in the vicinity of
... Along Lake Cayuga, south of ..."
6. Narrative and Critical History of America by Justin Winsor (1888)
"A detachment was also sent out to destroy the towns on the eastern side of Lake
Cayuga. On the 2ist another detachment was dispatched, with orders to lay ..."