In which province state or territory can you find a desert?
find a territory
Countries fight over their Territory. God did not make any Territory, just one huge world.
It is where you Look it up in a science book and find the answer your self! Dumbass's
You can find them most often in the Sahel Desert in Africa.
A savanna would be found in the middle of a transition where a rainforest goes into a desert.
British Columbia
Restaurants in every part of Canada serve dessert. The restaurants in Osoyoos, British Columbia, which is located in Canada's only desert, also serve dessert.
They are in British Columbia.
The Painted Desert is found in Arizona.
The Painted Desert, part of the larger Colorado Plateau Desert, is in the state of Arizona.
arizona
Gold was found in every single state in Australia. It was also found in the Northern Territory, but not in the Australian Capital Territory.
Connecticut is a state. I have searched, and cannot find a community in Canada called "Connecticut"
In the desert also in Kansas state park.
The Northern Territory is a territory on the Australian continent, one of two mainland Australian territories, and not a state. At Federation, the Northern Territory did not yet exist. From 1825 to 1863, the Northern Territory was part of New South Wales, and from 1863 to 1911 it was part of South Australia. This resulted from the successful 1862 expedition of John McDouall Stuart to find an overland route through the desert from Adelaide to the north. On 1 January 1911, the Northern Territory was separated from South Australia and transferred to Commonwealth control. The Northern Territory does not have the full rights that a state has, but the territory is administered by the Commonwealth delegating powers to the Northern Territory Legislative Assembly. States can govern their area in their own constitutional right. So, it is called a territory because it is an area of Australia controlled by Australia and is not an actual state.
The Northern Territory is one of two mainland Australian territories, and not a state. At Federation, the Northern Territory did not yet exist. From 1825 to 1863, the Northern Territory was part of New South Wales, and from 1863 to 1911 it was part of South Australia. This resulted from the successful 1862 expedition of John McDouall Stuart to find an overland route through the desert from Adelaide to the north. On 1 January 1911, the Northern Territory was separated from South Australia and transferred to Commonwealth control. The Northern Territory does not have the full rights that a state has, but the territory is administered by the Commonwealth delegating powers to the Northern Territory Legislative Assembly. States can govern their area in their own constitutional right. So, it is called a territory because it is an area of Australia controlled by Australia and is not an actual state.
The Adelaide River is in the Northern Territory of Australia and it starts in Litchfield National Park.