Generally low precipitation
All deserts have a dry climate.
Deflation of sand and silt from the surface
All deserts are dry - the only common factor for all. The desert is defined as a region that receives less than 10 inches (250 mm) of precipitation annually on average. Some deserts receive virtually no rainfall.
Quartz is the most common mineral in desert sand.
Yes, they are relatively common in parts of the Chihuahuan and Sonoran Deserts.
All deserts have a dry climate.
They all support plantlife.
Yes, there are mountains in the desert. They are a common feature.
Some deserts are hot, others cool and yet others cold. The only factor that all deserts have in common is that they are all very dry.
Deserts are dry, hot, And have sandy soil. These are climatic variables that all deserts have in common.
Deflation of sand and silt from the surface
there both deserts antarctica is a deserts they both have less precipitation
A typical desert is dry but not necessarily hot. There are cold deserts (Antarctica), there are cold winter deserts and there are cool coastal deserts. The only thing they have in common is that all receive less than 10 inches (250 mm) of precipitation per year on average. Temperature does not define a desert. The lack of humidity and cloud cover in a desert allows more sunlight to penetrate the atmosphere and heat the land below in those deserts with a hot climate.
No - "vast deserts" - is an adjective and a noun.
Asia's climate is sometimes cold and sometimes hot. It has an up/down climate. Asia's climate can be at times the wettest. Asia has most of the time a hot or warm climate.
All deserts are dry - the only common factor for all. The desert is defined as a region that receives less than 10 inches (250 mm) of precipitation annually on average. Some deserts receive virtually no rainfall.
in deserts