The hottest place on Earth is the Lut Desert in Iran, where surface temperatures have reached up to 159.3°F (70.7°C). The coldest place is Antarctica's East Antarctic Plateau, with temperatures dropping below -128.6°F (-89.2°C). The driest place is the McMurdo Dry Valleys in Antarctica, receiving virtually no precipitation. Conversely, the wettest place is Mawsynram in India, which receives an average annual rainfall of about 467.4 inches (11,871 mm).
Asia has many different climates; some of the coldest, some of the hottest, some of the wettest and some of the driest places on earth.
The land that have bases are federal property. Most are located in places that are the wettest, driest, hottest, isolated, swampy, snake ridden, coldest spots on earth.
Top 1 is debated between Atacama Desert, Chile and some place in Antarctica. I'm not sure about the rest, but I'm trying to find out the top 3 wettest and driest places in the world for a project.
The coldest place mentioned on page 42 is Antarctica, while the highest place mentioned is Mount Everest.
Chile has both the driest place on Earth, the Atacama Desert, and one of the wettest places on Earth, Cherrapunji in India.
The wettest place on earth is the Indian state of Meghalya which also in the summer months has no rain and is ofter in drought conditions. The driest place on earth is the Atacama dersert. The coldest is the Antarctica. Hope this helps.
Death Valley, part of the Mojave Desert, is the hottest, driest and lowest point of the United States.
yes, just a few deegrees
The Mojave Desert, which includes Death Valley, is the hottest and driest desert in the United States. The hottest temperature ever reliably recorded anywhere on earth was 134 degrees F in Death Valley of the Mojave.
Parts of Antarctica and the Atacama Desert in Chile are the driest places in the world.
Yes, deserts are the driest places on Earth.
The hottest place on Earth is usually considered to be Death Valley, California, USA, with temperatures often exceeding 50°C (122°F). The coldest place is often Antarctica, with the lowest recorded temperature on Earth of -89.2°C (-128.6°F) at the Vostok Station.