probably 50% not much with hardly water there
Both Antarctica and the Atacama are drier that the Sahara Desert. Neither of which receives any appreciable precipitation.
A desert is defined as a region that receives less than 10 inches (250 mm) of annual precipitation on average. Both the Sahara and Antarctica receive even less precipitation so are considered as deserts.
The largest desert in the world is the Antarctic Desert, located in Antarctica. Despite being covered in ice and snow, it is considered a desert because of its low precipitation levels.
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.
Both are deserts that receive little precipitation each year. The Sahara is a hot desert whie the Antarctic is a cold desert.
The area of the Sahara had already long been a desert by 2000 BCE. Lack of precipitation and a rise in temperature had dried up the area by 3400 BCE.
vary little, about once a year rain comes -scientist
Both the Antarctic Desert and the Simpson Desert have low precipitation levels.
The average precipitation amounts in the Sahara Desert is less than one-half of an inch every month of the year. It very rarely rains in deserts.
No, actually. The Antarctic Desert is the largest desert, though some geographers disagree. A desert is determined by its annual precipitation, and Antarctica is definitely a dry cold area.Deserts are normally divided into "cold" and "hot" deserts.The Sahara is the largest hot desert and Antarctica the largest cold desertThe Sahara Desert is the largest hot desert on Earth, but the largest desert overall is the Antarctic.
because trees need water that only oasises can supply in the Sahara. Trees can't grow anywhere else in the Sahara because of the extreme lack of precipitation
No, humidity levels rarely exceed 30%