North Korea has tundra regions in its northern mountains due to the cold climate, but it does not have deserts. The country's climate is primarily continental and cold, with distinct seasons throughout the year.
Some examples of biomes found on each continent: North America: temperate forests, grasslands, deserts South America: rainforests, savannas, deserts Europe: temperate forests, grasslands, tundras Africa: tropical rainforests, savannas, deserts Asia: temperate forests, taigas, deserts Australia: deserts, grasslands, temperate forests
Both tundras and deserts are characterized by extreme temperatures and limited vegetation, but they differ in terms of precipitation patterns. Tundras are cold with low precipitation, while deserts are hot with very low precipitation. Tundras have a layer of permafrost beneath the surface, while deserts have sandy or rocky terrain.
It is not located in North Korea; it is located in South Korea.
The capitol of North Korea is Pyongyang.
It is not located in North Korea; it is located in South Korea.
No, North and South Korea don't have deserts.
Well, DESERTS are tundras depending where you are. There are arctic tundras that are not deserts, but tundra deserts that are hot as well.
North Korean has no true deserts.
Yes, both deserts and tundras have low precipitation. However, they are two distinct biomes.
Korea has no true deserts.
Generally low precipitation
Biomes
South Dakota has some semiarid land but no true desert.
South Korea has no true deserts.
yea it is the north
There are no deserts in South Korea. It's the size of Ohio, c'mon. There are supposedly dry areas up in the mountain plains in North Korea, but that's about it. Usually, South Korea suffers from floods every summer.
No problems as South Korea has no deserts.