When multiple Triggered effects try to activate simultaneously, they will form a chain in the following order,
Turn Player's Mandatory Trigger,
Opponent's Mandatory Trigger,
Turn Player's Optional Trigger,
Opponent's Optional Trigger.
Both Needle Worm and Morphing Jar's effects are mandatory triggers. So if the turn player controls only one of them, then that one will be chain link 1, and the opponent's will be chain link 2. If the turn player controls both of them, he may put them in whatever order he wishes - they will resolve in reverse order.
the sahara desert
The cast of Out of the Desert - 1956 includes: Marvin Miller as Narrator
The cast of Desert - 1996 includes: Jay Johnston as The Great Angel
The cast of A Siren of the Desert - 1914 includes: Dolly Larkin
The cast of The Desert Vulture - 1919 includes: Texas Guinan
7
Sunlight is absorbed by the surface of the soil which is heated. The soil then radiates that heat to the air above it, raising the temperature of the desert.
The only desert that would have 21 hours of sunlight would be Antarctica during the summer months.
There is no 'Trans-Pecos Desert.' The term applies to the Chihuahuan Desert located in Far West Texas.
No, the term Australian Desert is a generic term that applies to ten separate deserts in that country.
Sunlight is absorbed by the surface of the desert and the surface is heated. The surface, in turn, heats the air above the desert.
there is always sunlight everyday every night through day.
10 hours a day
Sunlight
you can but it will die if it doesn't have the same amount of water as it does sunlight. it will have to much sunlight and that can kill it
Coniferous applies to forests of evergreens such as pines, spruce, etc. and not to deserts. I know of no 'coniferous desert.'
Rock, ice, snow, air and sunlight are abiotic factors of the Antarctic Desert.