Not all deserts are hot. Some deserts are cold. Antarctica, for example, is technically mostly a desert.
Deserts tend to have more extreme temperatures because they don't have much cloud cover. That means during the daytime, they get more sun, and at night, there's no cloud cover to reflect warmth back downward, so a lot of it escapes into space.
the desert
no, because the hottest place on earth is the saharah desert or the places near volcanoes.
the driest and hottest place on earth would be the Mexico or the sahara desert
Lut desert
Based on officially recognized measurements, the Mojave Desert in Death Valley is the hottest place on earth and notthe Sahara.
The hottest place on Earth with the highest average yearly temperature is typically in the Lut Desert in Iran. In this desert, temperatures can reach up to 159.3°F (70.7°C) during the summer months.
The hottest place can reach up to 138-159 degrees
No, the Atacama is a cold desert with temperatures rarely rising above 80 degrees F. Recently, Death Valley in the Mojave Desert of the United States was named the hottest place on earth. Previously that record was held by Libya.
Some of the driest and hottest regions of the earth include the Atacama Desert in Chile, the Sahara Desert in North Africa, and the Lut Desert in Iran. These locations receive very minimal rainfall and experience extreme temperatures, making them some of the harshest environments on the planet.
Yep! See the related question below for where it is!
The Lut Desert in Iran was once measured at 70.7C.
The Sahara Desert