Australians call deserts the 'outback.'
Uluru or Ayers Rock.
It is known as 'The Outback' - parts of it are inhabited, although sparsely.
No, the term Australian Desert is a generic term that applies to ten separate deserts in that country.
Of course the Australian Desert is in Australia. Australian Desert is a generic term used to describe the various deserts that compose it - Great Victoria Desert, Gibson Desert, Simpson Desert, etc.
Great Australian Desert is a generic term referring to all the deserts of Australia and the Great Sandy Desert is part of that.
Deserts of Australia:Central Desert - a central Australian desertGibson Desert - a central Australian desertGreat Sandy Desert - a northwestern Australian desertGreat Victoria Desert - the biggest desert in AustraliaLittle Sandy Desert - a western Australian desertSimpson Desert - a central Australian desertStrzelecki Desert - a south-central Australian desertTanami Desert - a northern Australian desert
There is no desert called the "Australian Desert." That is a generic term that applies to all the deserts in Australia. There are 10 deserts in Australia and all are located in the western 2/3 of the country.
The Red Centre, Centralia, the Outback, the Desert, take your pick.
The Red Centre, Centralia, the Outback, the Desert, take your pick.The Red Centre, Centralia, the Outback, the Desert, take your pick.
In North Africa, a vast stony desert plain is known as a reg.
What is the latitude and longitude of the australian desert?
Without doubt, Oceania's largest deserts are in Australia. The largest happens to be the Great Victoria Desert in Western Australia and South Australia, with an area of 348,750 km2, or 134,650 sq mi.