Less than 10 inches
The tundra is an unusually cold and dry climate. Precipitation totals 6-10 inches of rain a year, which includes melted snow. This is almost as little as the world's driest deserts. Coupled with strong and drying winds, the tundra is an extreme weather biome. The tundra seems like a wet and soggy place because the precipitation that falls evaporates slowly, and because of the poor drainage caused by the permafrost....
sub-arctic
The tundra is an unusually cold and dry climate. Precipitation totals 6-10 inches of rain a year, which includes melted snow. This is almost as little as the world's driest deserts. Coupled with strong and drying winds, the tundra is an extreme weather biome. The tundra seems like a wet and soggy place because the precipitation that falls evaporates slowly, and because of the poor drainage caused by the permafrost. l If you need more\/
In California most precipitation falls on the eastern sides of mountains
Precipitation is part of the process called the water cycle.
The tundra is an unusually cold and dry climate. Precipitation totals 6-10 inches of rain a year, which includes melted snow. This is almost as little as the world's driest deserts. Coupled with strong and drying winds, the tundra is an extreme weather biome. The tundra seems like a wet and soggy place because the precipitation that falls evaporates slowly, and because of the poor drainage caused by the permafrost....
60 to 150 inches of rainfall
sub-arctic
The grassland biome is one of the five major biome classifications. The average monthly temperature can be between -20°C to 30°C (depending on latitude) and precipitation is between 500 to 900 mm per year.
That is called: "Precipitation"
The heaviest rainfall in Canada occurs along the BC coast, where annual precipitation can sometimes exceed 2500 mm. Ocean Falls, BC, has the greatest annual rainfall of 4145.1 mm
Very little precipitation falls in the Arctic, and that which does is mostly snow rather than rain. The average annual precipitation is 500mm, which works out to an average monthly fall of just 42mm - less than two inches. This is sufficiently low that the Arctic is classified as the world's second largest desert (after Antarctica).
It's too cold and dry in Antarctica to rain, except on rare occasions on the Antarctic Peninsula. Precipitation that does not evaporate above it and falls on the continent, falls as ice crystals.
The tundra is an unusually cold and dry climate. Precipitation totals 6-10 inches of rain a year, which includes melted snow. This is almost as little as the world's driest deserts. Coupled with strong and drying winds, the tundra is an extreme weather biome. The tundra seems like a wet and soggy place because the precipitation that falls evaporates slowly, and because of the poor drainage caused by the permafrost. l If you need more\/
A month is generally considered dry if it receives less than 1 inch (25 mm) of precipitation.
Meteorologists use rain gauges to measure the amount of precipitation that falls during a storm. These gauges are designed to collect and measure the volume of rainwater that accumulates in them. The data from rain gauges help meteorologists to accurately report the amount of rainfall in a particular area.
In California most precipitation falls on the eastern sides of mountains