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[biomes] - desert
[ desert ] [ desert ] [ desert ]

Desert menu:
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Desert

Introduction
sahara
sahara[enlarge]
The desert is a dry, hot, and sometimes waterless place that is very vast. Deserts take up 8.6 million square miles (22 million square kilometers) of the earth's surface. Deserts receive less than 10 inches (25 centimeters) of rain annually. One of the driest deserts in the world is the Atacama Desert. This desert acquires below one inch (2.5 centimeters) a year. Some of the worlds largest deserts, the Sahara, Australian, and the Arabian, lie between latitude 30° south and latitude 30° north. This latitude belt has constant high pressure, which keeps low-pressure air that forms rain clouds, out of the area.

death valley
death valley[enlarge]
Most deserts are very hot. In Death Valley, a part of the Mojave Desert, temperatures are known to reach 190° F (88° C). The Great Basin desert, however, is at a higher elevation and can get very cold in the winter. Even hot deserts can get cold during the night, because hot air dissipates very quickly once the sun goes down.

great basin
great basin[enlarge]
The Mojave and the Great Basin in the southwestern United States are sheltered by mountain ranges, which stop rain clouds from advancing into the deserts.

The Atacama rarely accumulates rain clouds because of the cold Humboldt currents in the Pacific Ocean. When rain clouds pass over this cold current they lose their rain before reaching land.




Contributions:   [add contribution]

Name:
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jackie
United States
  Date: 2004-01-17
Time: 13:10:37
Contribution:
omg very good site u helped alot!@!

Name:
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kim
Canada
  Date: 2004-01-15
Time: 18:46:16
Contribution:
u could say sumthin' about ecological problems...other than that i used this website for almost all my research

Name:
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jo
United States
  Date: 2003-12-03
Time: 18:23:01
Contribution:
thank u thank u thank u!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Name:
Country:
caitlin
United States
  Date: 2003-11-03
Time: 16:39:47
Contribution:
very good site for research. Good things on different bomes of the world. I like how you split them up in to what is in the biome

Name:
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Xavier
Canada
  Date: 2003-09-26
Time: 14:09:29
Contribution:
nicely done !!! Very informative

Name:
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James
United States
  Date: 2003-05-04
Time: 15:57:54
Contribution:
its good, but it should have graphs of the temp and preciptation for each biome and month. But overall its a great site.

Name:
Country:
Rachel
United States
  Date: 2003-04-28
Time: 11:04:33
Contribution:
this site was alot of help thanks. peace

Name:
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Frankie
United States
  Date: 2003-03-20
Time: 18:14:49
Contribution:
I love this site!!! It helped me a lot with my biome report on the desert!! Thanks to the creators my project wa a lot easier!! Thanks again!!

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Country:
kay
United States
  Date: 2002-10-10
Time: 15:29:57
Contribution:
this site is cool

Name:
Country:
Sarah
United States
  Date: 2002-10-07
Time: 18:17:35
Contribution:
thanks for the info but you need a map of all the biomes! especially desert!

Name:
Country:
la\'quishia
United States
  Date: 2002-02-20
Time: 10:05:11
Contribution:
science rules its totally coooolll!!

Biomes - Desert

Where could you look for water if you were lost in the desert?


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Study Essentials:
As you read the text on desert, make a note of the following concepts:

- How does the saguaro cactus survive in the desert?

- What type of land formations can be formed by the wind? What types are formed by the water?

- What is the deserts climate like?

- How do animals avoid the heat of the desert?

- What are arachnids?

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