Great Salt Lake
Utah's Great Salt Lake is the largest saline lake in the Western Hemisphere. It is the remnant of an ancient lake known as Lake Bonneville, which used to be as large as Lake Michigan until a cataclysmic flood during the most recent Ice Age reduced it to near its current size.
Colorado River
The Colorado River is the most well known river in the United States other than the Mississippi. It originates in Colorado, winding through Utah, Nevada, Arizona, California and the Mexican states of Baja California and Sonora before terminating in the Gulf of California. Most famously, it travels through the Grand Canyon and the Hoover Dam. Indeed, 17 million years ago, the Colorado River and its tributaries slowly began carving out the Grand Canyon.
Rio Grande
Also known as the Rio Bravo to Mexicans, this river famously comprises Texas' entire western border, physically separating it from the Mexican states Chihuahua, Coahuila, Tamaulipas and Nuevo Leon. It travels from Colorado, through New Mexico, down the length of Texas and terminates in the Gulf of Mexico. It is the fourth longest river in the United States.
Gulf of Mexico
The Gulf of Mexico is an ocean basin, containing within it the entire eastern coast of Mexico, Texas, the Gulf States, and part of Cuba. Scientists believe the Gulf of Mexico was formed during the Late Triassic geological period as a result of continental rifting of the supercontinent that comprised the entire landmass on Earth. It is the ninth largest body of water in the world.