less than 250mm (or 10 inches) a year
A desert is defined as a region that receives less than 10 inches (250 mm) of rainfall per year. Some deserts receive much less.
Desert not always mean a hot place. A desert is a place where rainfall (or the equivalent in snow) is less than 10 inches (250 mm) per year. rainfall is not these much in Antarctica. That's why antarctica is a desert.
There is no 'Atlantic Desert.' Do you mean the Atacama Desert? The Atacama receives virtually no rainfall on average per year.
There is a Mojave Desert and a Namib Desert but no Mohib Desert.
A desert is defines as a region that receives less than 10 inches (250 mm) of rainfall per year. Much of that comes during brief summer thunderstorms. Average over a year, the desert would receive about 0.80" of rain per month.
A Desert Climatogram is a graph that shows the temperature and rainfall, for each month in the year, for the Desert. A Desert Climatogram is a graph that shows the temperature and rainfall, for each month in the year, for the Desert.
desert
A desert is defined as a region that receives less than 25 cm of rainfall per year on average. Some deserts receive much less than that.
On average between 100mm (in the north) and 150mm in the South of rain per year. See related link:
Antarctica.. a desert is defined by how much rainfall it receives. Although it is made of ice, Antarctica has almost no rainfall per year, some areas have had NO rainfall for thousands of years, so technically, the continent is a desert.
If by dry you are referring to a desert, it receives less than 10 inches (250 mm) of rainfall per year on average.
Your question is redundant. The only kind of desert is a dry desert. There is no such thing as a 'wet desert.' A desert is defined as a region that receives less than 10 inches (250 mm) of precipitation per year on average.