
Terminology
Welcome to CWAnswers
CWAnswers is your guide to the sprawling world wide web. The directory aims to provide a useful guide made by users. You can share your knowledge as well - simply sign up and edit your first entry. For questions just contact the team at support - at - cwanswers.com.
Weblinks for Desert
Top 10 for Desert
Things about Desert you find nowhere else.
Select content modules
desert-rock-blog.com :: Main Page
desert-rock-blog.com. Home. Syndicate ... blog site centers on the proposed coal-fired power plant called the Desert Rock ... Permit for Desert Rock Coal Plant ...www.desert-rock-blog.com/DesertBlog
News and Views from the Desert Protective Council ... of desert-centric posts put together by Chris Clarke on his Coyote Crossing blog. ...www.dpcinc.org/blog/desert-rock-blog.com :: Main Page
desert-rock-blog.com ... blog site centers on the proposed coal-fired power plant called ... The Desert Rock Energy Project has never been viable, as it ...www.desert-rock-blog.com/blogDesert Blog " Best Green Blogs Directory
Nothing Grows in the Desert. Two Meetings Monday Evening. Carnival of the Arid ... Romm vs. the Desert. House passes wilderness bill. Must-See Green TV ...www.bestgreenblogs.com/desert-blog/Beaded Desert Blog
Beaded Desert Blog. I'm a beader, I live in the desert. Hence, Beaded Desert. This blog will be about my beading adventures, my trials and tribulations, my ...beadeddesert.blogspot.com/

Terminology
Deserts are part of a wider classification of regions that, on an average annual basis, have a moisture deficit (i.e. they can potentially lose more than is received). Deserts are located where vegetation cover is sparse to almost nonexistent.What is a desert?
Geography


Deserts take up about one fifth (20 percent) of the Earth's land surface. Hot deserts usually have a large diurnal and seasonal temperature range, with high daytime temperatures, and low nighttime temperatures (due to extremely low humidity). In hot deserts the temperature in the daytime can reach 45 °C/113 °F or higher in the summer, and dip to 0 °C/32°F or lower in the winter. Water acts to trap infrared radiation from both the sun and the ground, and dry desert air is incapable of blocking sunlight during the day or trapping heat during the night. Thus, during daylight most of the sun's heat reaches the ground, and as soon as the sun sets the desert cools quickly by radiating its heat into space. Urban areas in deserts lack large (more than 14 °C/25 °F) daily temperature variations, partially due to the urban heat island effect.
Many deserts are formed by rain shadows; mountains blocking the path of precipitation to the desert. Deserts are often composed of sand and rocky surfaces. Sand dunes called ergs and stony surfaces called hamada surfaces compose a minority of desert surfaces. Exposures of rocky terrain are typical, and reflect minimal soil development and sparseness of vegetation. The soil is rocky because of the low chemical weathering.
Bottomlands may be salt-covered flats. Eolian processes are major factors in shaping desert landscapes. Cold deserts (also known as polar deserts) have similar features, except the main form of precipitation is snow rather than rain. Antarctica is the world's largest cold desert (composed of about 98 percent thick continental ice sheet and 2 percent barren rock). Some of the barren rock is to be found in the so-called Dry Valleys of Antarctica that almost never get snow, which can have ice-encrusted saline lakes that suggest evaporation far greater than the rare snowfall due to the strong katabatic winds that evaporate even ice.
The largest hot desert is the Sahara.
Deserts sometimes contain valuable mineral deposits that were formed in the arid environment or that were exposed by erosion. Due to extreme and consistent dryness, some deserts are ideal places for natural preservation of artifacts and fossils.

























