False
Well, The Great Victoria Desert receives only a little bit of rain, though not as little as one might suspect for a desert. Therainfallrange is around200 - 250 mma year, but the rain is unreliable! The Southern parts of the desert receives some winter rainfall, further north of the desert the only water source are thunderstorms- and they are isolated and unpredictable.
This is a common description of a desert though precipitation alone is not the only governing factor.
Hot tropical deserts - examples: 1.) Sahara, 2.) Thar Desert, 3.) Sonoran Desert, 4.) Great Victorian Desert, 5.) Mojave Desert, 6.) Gibson Desert, 7.) Arabian Desert, others
A desert is defined as a region that receives less than 10 inches (250 mm) of precipitation on average per year. Antarctica, even though it is covered largely by ice, meets that criterion. Antarctica received very little snow each year.
Bird Feed
It receives an average annual snowfall of 49.3 inches.
Rift Valley
If you are referring to Death Valley, California. It does not get flooded because there is a large mass of rock in the form of mountains and continental crust between the ocean and the valley. All that rock is quite capable of keeping the ocean from seeping in.
There are saguaro cacti that live in the desert but there is no Saguaro Desert.
The bodies veins.
San Fernando Valley (not really sure about it though, sorry!)
It really depends on what desert your talking about. though every desert has two resources in common, Sand and Sun,