they dig in the ground to get water from underground
they found IT by the animals
Desert-dwelling Aborigines dig for tubers and yams at the base of the plentiful vegetation that lives in many of Australia's deserts. As Aborigines must live near water, many of them have access to nardoo, a fern that lives along the inland waterways, and which can be ground into a floury substance and cooked. They hunt red kangaroos and wallabies that come to the waterholes to drink, perentie (large goannas) and birds such as budgerigars.
There is no food in the Simpson Desert that Europeans would understand how to find and prepare adequately for consumption. Only the local indigenous people would possess the skills to find and prepare the food. For example, desert nardoo provided a satisfying food for the Aborigines of the desert. After explorers Burke and Wills were offered it by the Aborigines, they started to collect and prepare their own, mimicking how they had seen the Aborigines prepare it - but they forgot one vital step, which rendered the nardoo indigestible and quite useless nutritionally.
You can find water in cactus.
Water is scarce in a desert.
John McDouall Stuart, like many of the early Australian explorers, carried water for his initial forays into the desert. During these expeditions, he recorded where the permanent waterholes were, and used them later to supplement the supplies he carried. He actually had a few confrontations with the desert Aborigines over his use of their waterholes.
Yes. Australian Aborigines were especially adept at finding the best place to dig down to the water table to extract water. Deserts also do have some permanent waterholes, as is the case in Australia's Simpson Desert.
Yes you can find water at an oasis because it is a desert land form that receives water from underground supplies.
in a oasis
The desert is a habitat where it is very rare to find sources of water.
they find water in the desert to survive.they dig sand too.
The Arabs find the water in the oasis and canals