Rivers, if they can find one.
You may be referring to an oasis where there is a permanent water supply that supports more plant life that the surrounding desert.
Too HotLimited Water
The vast majority of the millions of people living in deserts reside in cities and towns where food and water are readily available in stores, markets and restaurants.
Soil, sand, rocks, gravel, water, air and light are all non-living (abiotic) factors in the Sahara Desert.
It helps people in the desert to have fresh water, and they do not have to dig for ever to make a well or something and the people in the desert will wake up and know that they have fresh water running through pipes.
Cattle is the biggest agricultural product from the Simpson Desert. However, it is largely considered an uninhabitable desert. There is little human activity. The only agriculture is around water holes.
oats barleys and the crops which uses less water.
There is no water and it is sooooo dry. But it doesnt harm people, if they can have living conditions they can still live in dessert. Most of the gulf countries are in desert.
Hot, dry, few people, and little water.
No. While some of Australia's western and southern deserts are close to the water, the Simpson desert is not one of them. There are, however, permanent waterholes in the Simpson, such as Dalhousie Springs, along the watercourse of the ancient Finke River, and the Kaliduwarry Waterhole, a permanent supply which stretches for some 30 kilometres.
Yes. Australian Aborigines were especially adept at finding the best place to dig down to the water table to extract water. Deserts also do have some permanent waterholes, as is the case in Australia's Simpson Desert.
Sand, gravel, soil, rocks, water, light - make up the abiotic (non-living) factors of a desert. All plants and animals living in the desert make up the biotic, or living factors of a desert.
Soil, sand, gravel, rocks, water and light are non-living factors found in a desert.
Nomads
NO! Why in the world will there be water in a desert,there is barely plants and animals living there! It is the hottest and dryest biome.
Life in a desert is tough. Naturally these people can face rough weather and can survive in extreme weather conditions. For water consumption they utilize water from natural water reservoirs which they have to consume very carefully because rainfall in this area is very low.
Soil, sand, rocks, water, light are non-living (abiotic) factors in a desert.