Uluru or Ayers Rock.
There is no such desert as the Great Australian Desert. There are a number of deserts in that country that comprise the collective deserts of Australia that are sometimes referred to as 'The Outback.'
No. While many parts of the outback are desert regions, a large amount is reasonably fertile land, suitable for growing grain crops, or for running sheep and cattle.
The desert/'outback'.
Yes. Most of the interior of Australia ("The Outback") is a desert.
It is the Outback.
There is no official desert called the "Great Australian Desert". This is just a generic name given to the deserts and outback regions on the continent of Australia. The so-called Great Australian Desert is actually made up of the following separate deserts:Great Victoria DesertGreat Sandy DesertTanami DesertSimpson DesertGibson DesertLittle Sandy DesertStrzelecki DesertSturt Stony DesertTirari DesertPedirka Desert
The Outback, or the Desert. The desert proper is rarely called the Outback; but certainly much of the territory bordering true desert and even the Nullabor Plain itself can be called the Outback
All the Australian deserts are hot subtropical deserts.
AustraliaIt should be noted that there is no official desert called the "Great Australian Desert". This is just a generic name given to the deserts and outback regions on the continent of Australia. The so-called Great Australian Desert is actually made up of the following separate deserts:Great Victoria DesertGreat Sandy DesertTanami DesertSimpson DesertGibson DesertLittle Sandy DesertStrzelecki DesertSturt Stony DesertTirari DesertPedirka Desert
Aussies call the desert areas "the Outback."
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.
Australians call deserts the 'outback.'