A drought is an extended period of significantly below average precipitation in a region.
Severe droughts occur commonly in the interior and towards the western coast of continents, particularly Africa and Australia. However, they can occur anywhere, and with different levels of severity.
Drought is an abnormally long period of dry weather because there is a severe lack of water in an environment over an extended period of time. For a drought to happen, it means that rainfall has fallen below the average necessary to water crops and/or livestock, and to refill dams for months at a time. When moisture near the ground rises into the colder areas of the upper atmosphere rain clouds form. High pressure in the atmosphere causes air to rise instead of falling, resulting in dry, sunny weather. When high pressure cannot be displaced by low-pressure for an extended period of time, the result is drought.
Lack of rain may be a result of the El Nino phenomenon, which brings dry conditions to some parts of the world for sometimes as long as several years at a time. This is why the southern continents of Africa and Australia are particularly prone.
Desertification is a vicious cycle which increases drought-like conditions, and makes it increasingly difficult for the land to recover. Desertification may occur as a result of man's intervention in the environment, particularly activities such as deforestation and cutting down trees, over-grazing of stock animals, or farming unsuitable crops for a region (e.g. rice, which has to have large amounts of water pumped to it).
Some recent droughts are believed to have happened because of global warming.
The main causes of drought are lack of precipitation, high temperatures leading to evaporation, and changes in weather patterns such as El Niño. Human activities like deforestation, over-extraction of water, and climate change can also exacerbate drought conditions.
Quickly evaporating rainwater causes most of the drought cycles
Four causes of drought in the Caribbean include irregular rainfall patterns associated with climate change, El Niño events that bring drier conditions, deforestation leading to reduced water retention, and overuse of water resources for agriculture and tourism.
A long period of no rain is called a drought.
A period with little rain is a drought.(The archaic equivalent was drouth.)
drought
drought
El Nino
A drought is an extended period of significantly below average precipitation in a region. NO, drought is a shortage of rainfall or dry weather!!!!!!!
Drought, and infertile land
There is no 'drought cycle' in Antarctica: Antarctica is always dry with little or no precipitation.
It causes drought. It becomes so hot
The opposite may be like a drought or similar a summer monsoon that causes rain and a winter monsoon which causes drought so there are some differences and similarity's
drought
Lack of rain in hot places like Indonesia and Australia will cause drought
The main causes of drought are lack of precipitation, high temperatures leading to evaporation, and changes in weather patterns such as El Niño. Human activities like deforestation, over-extraction of water, and climate change can also exacerbate drought conditions.
over worked land and drought