A desert is defined as am area that receives less than 250 mm of annual precipitation on average.
A desert can be hot or cold. A desert is classified as a place that receives little to no rainfall.
Desert and grassland are quite different. Deserts are characterised by very low annual precipitation, whereas grasslands do receive healthy seasonal rainfall. More abundant species of plants and animals can be found in grasslands, whereas the desert flora and fauna are more limited, with special adaptations that allow them to live in such extreme climates.
it rains about 30-50 percent and the climate is windy
Extremey hot climates such as the Sahara desert ( equatorial ) or Extremely Cold climates such as Antarctica. The desert part refers to there being no or very little rain fall or liquid water in these places.
the desert is not thickly populated or is thinly populated because of the following reasons. *this region does not receive much rainfall throughout the year. *it is very hot in summer. *the nights are pleasant in summer but very cold in winter. *life in the desert is very tough.
The largest desert is technically Antarctica. The largest hot desert is the Sahara in northern Africa. What defines a desert is the amount of annual rainfall, of which Antarctica has very little.
A desert can be hot or cold. A desert is classified as a place that receives little to no rainfall.
Khartoum is desert, very hot, and receives little rainfall.
Desert not always mean a hot place. A desert is a place where rainfall (or the equivalent in snow) is less than 10 inches (250 mm) per year. rainfall is not these much in Antarctica. That's why antarctica is a desert.
a desert A desert is commonly defined as an area where the average annual evaporation rate is in excess of the annual rainfall. Deserts can be classified into two categories: hot and cold. Examples of hot deserts include the Kalahari and Sahara Deserts (where the average annual rainfall is very low and the average temperature is high). Examples of cold deserts would be the Antarctic, here, although it is cold very little rain falls, most precipitation is in the form of sleet and snow.
Deserts get little rainfall and some of them are quite hot - but not all. There are cold deserts also.
a desert A desert is commonly defined as an area where the average annual evaporation rate is in excess of the annual rainfall. Deserts can be classified into two categories: hot and cold. Examples of hot deserts include the Kalahari and Sahara Deserts (where the average annual rainfall is very low and the average temperature is high). Examples of cold deserts would be the Antarctic, here, although it is cold very little rain falls, most precipitation is in the form of sleet and snow.
Some sort of desert.
A desert.
In Summer, temperatures in the Gibson Desert can exceed 40 degrees Celsius. Maximum temperatures in Winter can be as low as 18 degrees C, whilst Winter minimums are quite cold, dropping to 6 degrees. Annual rainfall in the Gibson Desert is between 200mm and 250mm.
deserts are hot because of lack of rainfall and due the climate change also the Sahara desert is near the equator. the lack of rainfall and the moister in the air by Merza
Sudan has a tropical climate. Seasonal variations are most sharply defined in the desert zones. Annual rainfall, most of which occurs mid-June and September. So I think it is not hot all throughout the year. But most of the time it is hot because they are near the equator.