Precipitation in Antarctica -- on average -- is no more than an inch or two each year..
None. Any rainfall in Antarctica is concentrated on the Antarctic Peninsula. The Trans-Antarctic mountains are too cold for rain. Plus, further inland, there is essentially no precipitation, that geography being a polar desert.
depends on what desert ur talking about
Osoyoos has semiarid climate and is not classified as a desert. It receives an average of 279.4 mm (11 inches) of rainfall annually.
A desert is defined by the amount of precipitation it gets. It can and does snow in some deserts. The Antarctic Desert is the largest in the world and they get snow there. Others where it may snow are the Gobi Desert, Patagonian Desert, Great Basin Desert, Karakum Desert, Colorado Plateau, and Kyzyl Kum.
Each desert is different so you need to be a bit more specific.
Sorry, there is no Antarctic Fox.
Deserts are defined as having less than 10 inches of precipitation all year. It actually has nothing to do with heat. The antarctic is so cold that very little water vapor can exist in the air above it so there is not much to fall as snow, therefore, it's a desert.
Average rainfall of less than 30 Millimeters
169,069. average amount of 125 cases.
Zero rain has to fall. However, if the region consistently receives over 10 inches (250 mm) of precipitation on average per year it is not considered a true desert.
While not common in hot deserts, snow has fallen in even the hottest of deserts such as the Mojave, Sahara, Chihuahuan and Sonoran Deserts. It is even more common in the cold deserts, especially in the Antarctic Desert, Great Basin Desert and the Colorado Plateau Desert.
On average between 100mm (in the north) and 150mm in the South of rain per year.