Humans and many other animals that have not adapted to very hot climates suffer severely in the desert. It is wery hot anad dry and there is hardy any water. If stranded on a desert you would not be able to see any civilization nearby or any form of huma activity. You would feel weak and helpless.
I live in the desert, the Chihuahuan Desert, and love it. Yes, it can get quite hot in the summer. Yes, a few times each year we have dust storms. However, winters make up for all that. When I watch the news and see all those cities in the north and Midwest buried in snow, I can only smile. Snow is rare here and, when it does fall, it quickly disappears. Winter days are usually quite mild and 70 degrees on Christmas is not unheard of. Severe storms are rare here. Yes, we get thunderstorms but they rarely come with tornadoes.
That would depend upon the specific location in the desert. In most locations life would be about the same as in non-desert locations.
Las Vegas, Nevada, in the Mojave Desert is famous for its night life as well as day life.
There is a wide variety of life in the desert if you know when and where to look. Many animals are nocturnal and emerge only after dark. Some animals stay underground during the day to avoid the heat.
This Desert Life was created in 1998.
How was the Hopis life after they moved to the desert?
no. its a desert for a reason
There are many forms of life in the desert.
A desert
The desert tortoise spends most of its life in burrows underground.
The cast of A Desert Life - 2012 includes: Alf Randell
Plants from the division Magnoliophyta are well suited for desert life.
The people who went to the desert to seek new life is the Essenes.
The desert tortoise spends most of its life underground in a burrow.