Depending on location, rainfall varies from 0 to 2 mm in January - virtually nothing.
On average between 100mm (in the north) and 150mm in the South of rain per year.
On average, it only has 8 inches of rainfall per year.
The Sahara Desert.
Anything! Camel riding, Camping, swiming in an desert pool (:
For the only time in recorded weather history, snow fell in the Sahara desert in southern Algeria on February 18, 1979. The storm lasted only half an hour and the snow was gone within hours. ------------ Snow fell again in the Algerian Sahara in January and February of 2012.
Out of the deserts in the list, the Sahara is the largest.However, bearing in mind that a desert is defined as an area where less than 250mm of precipitation fall annually, the largest desert in the world is actually Antarctica.
The harmattan is a dry Saharan wind from the direction of the Sahara desert.
depends on what desert ur talking about
The Sahara Desert is a hot, sandy desert. Antarctica is a continent with a large desert covering much of it's surface. It is of course cold and much of it consists of the East Antarctic Ice Sheet, although the dry valleys in the trans-antarctic mountains are not ice covered, and have sand dunes like more temperate deserts.
Osoyoos has semiarid climate and is not classified as a desert. It receives an average of 279.4 mm (11 inches) of rainfall annually.
The Sahara Desert is expanding because of desertification; the process of earth/land turning into desert due to the loss of moisture in the soil and loss of vegetation. Also it may be caused by human activity and an increase in the human population in one area.
Each desert is different so you need to be a bit more specific.