Each of the 26 major desert regions of the world is different when it comes to rainfall. It could range from 0 in the Atacama Desert to possibly 6-8 inches or more in parts of the Sonoran Desert during their annual monsoon.
The average annual rainfall is 1 milimeter of rain every year.
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.
There is a Mojave Desert and a Namib Desert but no Mohib Desert.
Every desert is different with different weather statistics. You need to give a specific location.
the desert is not thickly populated or is thinly populated because of the following reasons. *this region does not receive much rainfall throughout the year. *it is very hot in summer. *the nights are pleasant in summer but very cold in winter. *life in the desert is very tough.
It can rain at anytime in the desert. However, some have a winter rainy season, some have a summer rainy season, some have both.
The only desert with snow in the summer is Antarctica.
1.83 Inches
No, Wales is not like a desert. It receives too much rainfall to be considered a desert.
Some deserts have a rainy season in the summer, some in the winter, some in both. Each desert is different.
Most deserts have a rainy season when they receive the major portion of their annual rainfall. Some have a rainy season in the summer. Some have a rainy season in the summer and a second in the winter.
A desert has little vegetation and rainfall.