It depends on which desert you're in - you can smell the plants and the dirt, and those will smell different depending on which plants they are and what the dirt is composed of in the different deserts. In some deserts, you can smell salt or alkali or other minerals. You could also smell animals, and they'll be different in different deserts. You might even smell water if you're at an oasis or river.
Air in the desert is little different from air elsewhere. In the desert the air contains little water vapor and, in some cases, may be quite hot.
Air over the ocean would have more moisture than air over a desert.
The Sahara Desert, the largest hot desert in the world.
Desert air usually has a very low moisture content. Air above a lake would be much more humid.
smell it and feel it
it smells eww
Huh? You certainly can smell and taste air - that's how scent travels, in the air. Surely you've smelled the fresh scent after a rain or the salt of the ocean. You can taste those as well if you pay attention.
The volatile organic aromatic compounds of pleasant smell evaporates from rose and diffuses through air out. That is why a person passing nearby a rose garden will feel the pleasant smell of rose.
sand
Yes, you can smell the air around you.
it smells like caribou with a touch of polar bear
Yes they do. Cockroaches are unique bugs. They use their antennae to locate things in the dark by feel and smell as well as can feel the slightest motion of air. They also have special legs that are hairy. These hairs can also feel the slightest movement of air thus explaining why it is hard to step on one because they can feel the air from your foot moving.
the desert horned lizard eats eagles.
No, you cannot smell static electricity in the air.
If there is very little oxygen present, the flame should turn blue.
Desert Air Force was created in 1941.
Air in the desert is little different from air elsewhere. In the desert the air contains little water vapor and, in some cases, may be quite hot.