The answer to this question is presumably "desert". However, this is not strictly true. According to the Desert Knowledge Australia Fact Sheet, 70% of Australia is classified as desert or semi-arid. However, much of this land is used for grazing beef cattle and sheep, so it is not desert in the truest sense. Other figures state an estimated 44% percent, or over one-third of Australia is made up of sandy or stony arid desert, while another 37% is semi-arid grassland or scrub.
Australia is made of land, it is a continent. Most of Australia is dry desert land.
The Sahara covers most of north Africa and is about the same size as the contiguous 48 states of the United States.
alluvial soil covers the most part of India.
The Sahara Desert covers most of Northern Africa.
Most of Western Australia, Australia's largest state, is made up of desert.
Temperate grasslands.
Desert.
australia
Australia is made of land, it is a continent. Most of Australia is dry desert land.
Gobi Desert covers most of the land in China and Mongolia.
Western Australia.
Most of Australia's agricultural land is in the southeastern quadrant and along the eastern coast.
trees and forests
The Sahara Desert covers most of Northern Africa.
topsoil
The taiga biome, also known as boreal forest, covers the most land area of any terrestrial biome. It stretches across northern North America, Europe, and Asia, characterized by cold temperatures and coniferous forests.
The tropical rainforest biome covers most of the land mass near Earth's equator. This biome is characterized by high temperatures, abundant rainfall, and dense vegetation, supporting a wide variety of plant and animal species.