Antarctica rarely gets above 0 degrees F. The Gobi and Taklamakan Deserts will sometimes drop well below zero during winter. The Great Basin and Colorado Plareau Deserts will sometimes drop that cold in winter.
Every desert is different. However, the coldest temperature ever measured in a desert was -135.8 degrees F. in Antarctica. The Gobi Desert occasionally has temperatures that drop to -40 degrees F in winter and the Great Basin Desert will drop below 0 degrees at times.
The hottest temperature ever reliably measured in a desert was 134 degrees F in Death Valley of the Mojave Desert in 1913.The hottest temperature ever reliably measured in a desert was 134 degrees F in Death Valley of the Mojave Desert in 1913.
There are several deserts that can drop below 0 degrees F in winter. Here are the major ones:Antarctic Desert Gobi Desert Taklamakan Desert Great Basin Desert Colorado Plateau Desert Patagonian Desert
The hottest air temperature ever reliablymeasured in a desert was 134 degrees F. at Furnace Creek in Death Valley of the Mojave Desert in 1913.The hottest air temperature ever reliably measured in a desert was 134 degrees F. at Furnace Creek in Death Valley of the Mojave Desert in 1913.
The Antarctic Desert has measured a low of -129 degrees F.
The hottest reliable temperature ever measured in a desert was 134 degrees in July of 1913 in Death Valley.
The coldest temperature ever measured in a desert was -135.8 degrees F in Antarctica.
Te coldest temperature ever measured in a desert was approximately -129 degrees F in the Antarctic Desert
Each of the many deserts in the world has its own climate statistics. The coldest that has ever been registered in a desert was -128 degrees F in Antarctica and the hottest ever reliably registered was +134 degrees F in Death Valley of the Mojave Desert.
The hottest temperature in the world ever measured reliably was 134 degrees F in Death Valley of the Mojave Desert. In the summer it is not unusual for temperatures to approach or exceed 120 degrees F.
The hottest desert in the world is the Lut Desert in Iran. It holds the record for the highest temperature ever recorded on Earth at 159.3 degrees Fahrenheit (70.7 degrees Celsius).
The hottest temperature ever reliably measured in the Desert was 134 degrees F. in the Mojave desert at Death Valley.