Deserts can be as large as the Antarctic Desert at 5,400,000 square miles to 1 square mile for the Carcross Desert in the Yukon.
Deserts can be quite small or quite large. They come in a variety of sizes.
Europe
Europe is the only continent without any major deserts. All of the deserts in Europe are quite small.
Europe has only small areas of semi-desert and no large, true deserts.
No. Sicily, the large island belonging to Italy is very dry but not a desert.
Europe has small deserts but is the only continent with no major deserts. Countries like Spain and Italy have a few small deserts.
There are no actual deserts in Cyprus as there are in the Middle East- the nearest you get to such a thing are large areas of rough white stony ground dotted with scrubby bushes, stunted olive and fir trees, and thickets of brambles. However, none of these are large enough to have names of their own- they are usually bordered by farmland or by housing development, Cyprus being a small country and needing to make maximum use of it's land area.
The Sahara and the Kalahari deserts.
While Canada has large areas of semiarid grasslands, it has no true deserts. There is a small area ( one square mile) of semiarid land called the Car Cross Desert.
All deserts have small communities. There are even research stations in the Antarctic Desert.
Yes, there is a large variety of rodents that live in deserts.
No, Nebraska has no true deserts. It does have large areas of semiarid grasslands but no deserts.