You may want to be more specific with your question. If you mean "What is a desert with few or no people," there are many of them. These include the Mojave and Sonoran Deserts, the Atacama Desert, the Sahara Desert, the Kalahari Desert, Gobi Desert, and Antarctica (a cold desert), just to name a few.
The Gobi Desert kept China isolated.
Yes, they are called rainshadow deserts because the mountains prevent atmospheric moisture from coming into the desert.
Well, The Great Victoria Desert receives only a little bit of rain, though not as little as one might suspect for a desert. Therainfallrange is around200 - 250 mma year, but the rain is unreliable! The Southern parts of the desert receives some winter rainfall, further north of the desert the only water source are thunderstorms- and they are isolated and unpredictable.
The physical characteristics of an oasis is a wet, fertile area of land in a desert where a natural spring or well provides water. Also an oasis is an isolated area of vegetation in a desert that grows ferns, shrubs, and trees most likely palm trees that is in a desert surrounded by a dry, sandy, and hot area climate.
Arabian Desert Antarctic Desert Atacama Desert
The Gobi Desert kept China isolated.
desert, sea, not on European continent. mostly desert
the Himalayas and the Gobi Desert.
sandy isolated desert tropical coral rocky
They've been isolated in that desert for so long. An isolated population can develop traits unique to a single region over time (on an evolutionary scale; a very long time).
Egypt is isolated by the Mediterranean Sea, Red Sea, Sahara Desert and the Ethiopian Highlands. ;)
The Addax (Addax nasomaculatus), also known as the screwhorn antelope, is an endangered desert antelope that lives in isolated regions in the Sahara desert.
Natural physical barriers led to China's isolation.
Sky islands
Yes, unless the desert is in an isolated area, most deserts are easy to visit.
I think the Himalayas? It's some mountain range. And I think the Gobi Desert.
He felt isolated due to the distance between his farm and the neighbors.