Absolutely no. As the desert occupied almost 9.1 million square kilometer (3.5 million square miles) it is impossible to make whole of the desert in green.
Firstly, it is due to its soil content. The desert are totally consist of sand of 0.2-2 mm in diameter and this just cannot allow the trees to grow. The reason is that there are no water reservoir among the soil particles as it easily leached. Furthermore, if water is supplied, the sand can choke or suffocated the trees. We can apply the organic material to the desert but are we willing to collect or dig just to cover the Sahara?
Secondly, if we CAN control the climate, then we may have an opportunity to survive in Sahara. The temperature and rainfall in Sahara just not adequate to even the Sahara itself.
However, there a a small parts in the desert that are able to be an agriculture activities which the water reservoirs (oasis) is there.
Take a note, we just cannot make Sahara green, but Sahara taking the green parts of the adjacent area.
If something is not man-made, it is typically considered to be natural, meaning it occurs in nature without human intervention or influence.
the Sahara desert was made around 4.6 billion years ago when the earth was created.
no
Camels
Materials can be either man-made or natural. Man-made materials are produced through human intervention, such as plastics or synthetic fabrics. Natural materials come from the environment without human processing, such as wood or cotton.
How the Earth Was Made - 2009 Sahara 2-4 is rated/received certificates of: Australia:G
No, the Sahara desert was made by the weather in Africa.
Weathered rock
Sahara 4000 made by shimano
The flag of Songhai consists of three horizontal stripes in the colors green, yellow, and red. Green represents the country's agriculture and natural resources, yellow symbolizes the Sahara Desert, and red stands for the sacrifices made for freedom and independence.
Yes, most of the sand is made of weathered rock.
camels