1.One-third of earth's land surface is partially or totally desert.
2.Antarctica is the largest desert in this world.
3."SAHARA" means "DESERT" in arabic so the "SAHARA DESERT" is the "DESERT DESERT."
4.It snowed in the SAHARA DESERT in 1979.
5.There were once camels roaming in the desert of Arizona.
6.The SAHARA DESERT stretches farther than the distance from New York to Los Angeles.
7.Alaska has a sand desert with dunes over 150 feet (45 m) high.
8.There is a secret swimming pool in the MOJAVE DESERT that anyone who finds it can use.
Far from being barren wastelands, deserts are biologically rich
habitats with a vast array of animals and plants that have adapted to the harsh conditions there.
Some deserts are among the planet's last remaining areas of total wilderness.
Yet more than one
billion people, one-sixth of the Earth's population, actually live in desert regions.
Deserts cover more than one fifth of the Earth's land, and they are found on every continent.
A place that receives less than 10 inches (25 centimeters) of rain per year is considered a desert.
Deserts are part of a wider classification of regions called "drylands." These areas exist under a
moisture deficit, which means they can frequently lose more moisture through evaporation than they
receive from annual precipitation.
And despite the common conceptions of deserts as dry and hot,
there are cold deserts as well.
The largest hot desert in the world, northern Africa's Sahara,
reaches temperatures of up to 122 degrees Fahrenheit (50 degrees Celsius) during the day.
But some
deserts are always cold, like the Gobi desert in Asia and the desert on the continent of Antarctica.
Others are mountainous. Only about 10 percent of deserts are covered by sand dunes.
The driest deserts
get less than half an inch (one centimeter) of precipitation each year, and that is from condensed fog not rain.
Desert animals have adapted ways to help them keep cool and use less water.
Camels, for example, can go for days
without food and water.
Many desert animals are nocturnal, coming out only when the brutal sun has descended to hunt.
Some animals, like the desert tortoise in the southwestern United States, spend much of their time underground.
Most desert birds are nomadic, crisscrossing the skies in search of food.
Because of their very special adaptations,
desert animals are extremely vulnerable to introduced predators and changes to their habitat.
Desert plants may have to go without fresh water for years at a time. Some plants have adapted to the arid climate
by growing long roots that tap water from deep underground. Other plants, such as cacti, have special means of storing
and conserving water. Many desert plants can live to be hundreds of years old.
Some of the world's semi-arid regions are turning into desert at an alarming rate.
This process, known as
"desertification," is not caused by drought, but usually arises from the demands of human populations that
settle on the semi-arid lands to grow crops and graze animals.
The pounding of the soil by the hooves of
livestock may degrade the soil and encourage erosion by wind and water.
Global warming also threatens to change the ecology of desert.
Higher temperatures may produce an increasing
number of wildfires that alter desert landscapes by eliminating slow-growing trees and shrubs and replacing them
with fast-growing grasses.

Many trade routes
have been forged across deserts, especially across the Sahara Desert, and traditionally were used by caravans of
camels carrying salt, gold, ivory and other goods. Large numbers of slaves were also taken northwards across the
Sahara. Some mineral extraction also takes place in deserts and the uninterrupted sunlight gives potential for the
capture of large quantities of solar energy.