No, they are not necessarily the same. Some deserts are quite cold - Anatarctica, Gobi, Patagonian, for example. Savannas and some grasslands are also hot and dry but are not deserts because of the precipitation they receive.
Tundra is also a dry climate.
Dry, hot, arid, desert.
A dry land climate is a climate focused in a desert area that is often in the middle of a continent with low moisture in the air and hot temperatures (theres no average temperature found).
yes because they only recieve little or no rainfall and it is a very dry place.
A region with very hot climate and little rain is typically classified as a desert. These areas have extreme temperatures and low precipitation levels, leading to arid and dry conditions. Examples include the Sahara Desert in Africa and the Arabian Desert in the Middle East.
It is not always a tropical desert. The climate in the southern part if the desert is a dry, tropical climate, while the climate in the northern part of the desert is a dry, subtropical climate.
The climate of the Atacama is cool and very dry in most areas. It would be classified as a cool, dry desert climate.
No, it is not. A desert is a biome. A climate would be the meteorological conditions, such as "hot and dry".
I think the climate is dry and hot...
The Atacama Desert is a cool, exceedingly dry desert.
It is hot and dry
desert (dry)
As dry as the desert.
Succulents.
Yes, of course it is!
Dry and hot.
The Tanami Desert is very dry and hot.