Every desert has different statistics. Some deserts are quite cold. Antarctica can drop to below minus 100 degrees F. Other deserts stay quite comfortable with temperatures rarely dropping below freezing.
A Desert Climatogram is a graph that shows the temperature and rainfall, for each month in the year, for the Desert. A Desert Climatogram is a graph that shows the temperature and rainfall, for each month in the year, for the Desert.
Cold or cold winter deserts may have temperatures quitr hot in the summer but can get bitterly cold in the winter. Examples: the Great Basin Desert, the Gobi Desert.
The Painted Desert is part of the Colorado Plateau Desert and does receive some snow in the winter occasionally.
The temperature in the Colorado desert can get very high. The average temperature of the desert in Colorado is 120 degrees Fahrenheit.
Temperatures vary greatly between night and day in many desert regions. Typically, humidity blocks the sun's radiation. Since deserts have little to no humidity, about twice the radiation is absorbed. At night, a greater amount of heat is lost due lack of humidity. This can bring temperatures well below freezing, especially during the winter months.
Which desert? All are different.
That really depends on which desert and what you consider "really cold". As an example: Antarctica (the coldest region on the earth) is considered a desert and no matter what you consider "really cold" Antarctica is probably colder than that during the winter! For comparison... Sahara Desert average winter temperature: 13 ºC (55 ºF) Arctic Desert (North pole area) average winter temperature −40 °C (−40 °F) Arabian Desert average winter temperature 41 °F (5 °C) - with frequent frosts Gobi Desert average winter temperature ~ -13 °F (-25 °C) - but reaching -40°F/-40 °C at times Kalahari Desert average winter temperature ~32 °F (0 °C) Patagonian Desert average winter temperature 34 °F (3 °C) Great Victoria Desert average winter temperature 41 °F (5 °C) - with frequent frosts Great Basin Desert average winter temperature ~32 °F (0 °C) Note that even within these deserts there are considerable variations, especially with altitude; higher altitudes are colder. Deserts also characteristically have wider temperature swings than more humid areas. Temperature swings of 95 °F (35 °C) in 24 hours are not uncommon in the Gobi Desert. The Saraha has seen daytime to nighttime temperature swing from 37.5 to -0.5 °C (100 to 31 °F).
There is no winter in the Kalahari desert, only a wet season and a dry season.
That depends on which desert you are referring to but the Antarctic Desert has measured a temperature of -135 degrees at night during the winter.
Each desert is different so you need to be a bit more specific.
The temperature in the Antarctic Desert can drop well below minus 100 degrees F.
Each desert has its own climate data and each differs from other deserts, We need you to name a specific desert.
The Gobi Desert is considered a cold winter desert. The Gobi can reach extremes of temperature ranging from –40°C (–40°F) in winter to +50°C (122°F) in summer.
Patagonian desert is a Cold desert. The normal temperature of this desert is about 3-4 degree Celsius.
I think that the average temperature should be recorded because some people need to find answers quickly!!!!!The average temperature of the Great Victorian desert is infact 40oc in summer but in winter it drops to 23oc.
The answer depends on which specific cold desert. If you are referring to the Antarctic, the coldest temperature ever recorded there was -128 degrees. The Gobi Desert of China may reach 100 degrees F in the summer and cool off to 40 degrees below zero in winter. The Great Basin Desert is similar - a very hot summer and a very cold winter.
The Gobi Desert is a cold winter desert that has hot summers and bitterly cold winters. The Atacama is a cool coastal desert with no temperature extremes. It is mild all year.