In
geography, a 'desert' is a
landscape form or region that receives very little
precipitation. Deserts are defined as areas that receive an average annual precipitation of less than 250
mm (10 in). In the
Köppen climate classification system, deserts are classed as (BW).
Terminology
Deserts where vegetation cover is exceedingly sparse correspond to the 'hyperarid' regions of the earth, where rainfall is exceedingly rare and infrequent.
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). These areas are collectively called '
drylands' and extend over almost a third of the earth's land surface. Because desert is a vague term, the use of 'dryland', and its subdivisions of hyper arid, arid, semiarid and dry-subhumid, is preferred in some contexts, and is approved by the United Nations.
Geography

A satellite image of the
Sahara, the world's largest hot desert and second largest desert after
Antarctica.
Deserts take up one-third of the Earth's land surface.
[1] They usually have a large
diurnal and seasonal temperature range, with high daytime temperatures (in summer up to 45 °C or 122 °F), and low nighttime temperatures (in winter up to 0 °C; 32 °F) due to extremely low
humidity. 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 all of the
sun's heat reaches the ground. As soon as the sun sets the desert cools quickly by radiating its heat into space. Urban areas in deserts lack large (more than 25 °F/14 °C) daily temperature ranges, partially due to the
urban heat island effect.
Many deserts are not shielded in rain by
rain shadows, mountains blocking the path of precipitation to the desert. Desert landscapes have certain undistinctive features. Deserts are often composed of
sand and
rocky surfaces.
Sand dunes called ''little birdys''
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 snow surface at Dome C Station in Antarctica is a representative of the majority of the continent's surface.
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 but the main form of precipitation is
snow rather than
rain.
Antarctica (composed of about 98 percent thick
continental
ice sheet and 2 percent barren rock). 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. Because deserts are so dry, they are ideal places for artifacts and fossils to be preserved.
Etymology
The English, French ''(désert)'', Spanish ''(desierto)'', Italian ''(deserto)'', all come from the Latin ''desertum'', meaning "an unpopulated place." This in turn is derived from the
Egyptian word ''dSr.t'', which literally means "red land" and refers to the desert.
Types of desert
In 1953,
Peveril Meigs divided desert regions on Earth into three categories according to the amount of precipitation they received. In this now widely accepted system, extremely arid lands have at least 12 consecutive months without rainfall, arid lands have less than 250 millimeters (10 in) of annual rainfall, and semiarid lands have a mean annual precipitation of between 250 and 500 millimeters (10-20 in). Arid and extremely arid lands are deserts, and semiarid grasslands are generally referred to as
steppes.
However, lack of rainfall alone can't provide an accurate description of what a desert is. For example,
Phoenix, Arizona receives less than 250 millimeters (10 in) of precipitation per year, and is immediately recognized as being located in a desert. The
North Slope of Alaska's
Brooks Range also receives less than 250 millimeters (10 in) of precipitation per year, but is not generally recognized as a desert region. Deserts have moderate to cool winters and hot summers.
The difference lies in something termed "potential
evapotranspiration."
The water budget of an area can be calculated using the formula P-PE+/-S, wherein P is precipitation, PE is potential evapotranspiration rates and S is amount of surface storage of water. Evapotranspiration is the combination of water loss through atmospheric
evaporation, coupled with the evaporative loss of water through the life processes of plants. Potential evapotranspiration, then, is the amount of water that ''could'' evaporate in any given region. As an example,
Tucson, Arizona receives about 300 millimeters, (12 in), of rain per year, however about 2500 millimeters, (100 in), of water could evaporate over the course of a year. In other words, about 8 times more water could evaporate from the region than actually falls. Rates of evapotranspiration in other regions such as Alaska are much lower, so while these regions receive minimal precipitation, they should be designated as specifically different from the simple definition of a desert: a place where evaporation exceeds precipitation.
With that said, there are different forms of deserts. Cold deserts can be covered in
snow; such locations don't receive much precipitation, and what does fall remains frozen as snow pack; these are more commonly referred to as
tundra if a short season of above-freezing temperatures is experienced, or as an
ice cap if the temperature remains below freezing year-round, rendering the land almost completely lifeless.
Most non-polar deserts are hot because they have little
water. Water tends to have a cooling, or at least a moderating, effect in environments where it is plentiful. In some parts of the world deserts are created by a
rain shadow effect in which air masses lose much of their moisture as they move over a
mountain range; other areas are arid by virtue of being very far from the nearest available sources of moisture (this is true in some middle-latitude landmass interior locations, particularly in
Asia).
Deserts are also classified by their geographical location and dominant weather pattern as trade wind, mid-latitude, rain shadow, coastal, monsoon, or
polar deserts. Former desert areas presently in non-arid environments are paleodeserts.
Montane deserts
Montane deserts are arid places with a very high
altitude; the most prominent example is found north of the
Himalaya especially in Laddakh region of Jammu and Kashmir (India), in parts of the
Kunlun Mountains and the
Tibetan Plateau. Many locations within this category have elevations exceeding 3,000 meters (10,000 ft) and the thermal regime can be
hemiboreal. These places owe their profound aridity (the average annual precipitation is often less than 40 mm/1.5in) to being very far from the nearest available sources of moisture. Montane deserts are normally cold.
Rain shadow deserts
Rain shadow deserts form when tall mountain ranges block clouds from reaching areas in the direction the wind is going. As the air moves over the mountains, it cools and moisture condenses, causing
precipitation on the windward side.
Moisture almost never reaches the
leeward side of the mountain, resulting in a desert. When that air reaches the leeward side, the air is dry, because it has already lost the majority of its moisture. The air then warms, expands, and blows across the desert. The warm air takes with it any remaining small amounts of moisture in the desert.
Desert features

Satellite view of
Al-Dahna desert in Saudi Arabia. Different depositional features can be clearly seen.
Sand covers only about 20 percent of Earth's deserts. Most of the sand is in sand sheets and sand seas—vast regions of undulating dunes resembling ocean waves "frozen" in an instant of time. In general, there are six forms of deserts:
★ Mountain and basin deserts
★
Hamada deserts, which comprise of plateau landforms
★ Regs, which consist of rock pavements
★ Ergs, which are formed by sand seas
★ Intermontane Basins
★ Badlands, which are located at the margins of arid lands comprising of clay-rich soil
Nearly all desert surfaces are plains where eolian deflation—removal of fine-grained material by the wind—has exposed loose gravels consisting predominantly of
pebbles but with occasional
cobbles.
The remaining surfaces of arid lands are composed of exposed
bedrock outcrops, desert soils, and
fluvial deposits including
alluvial fans,
playas, desert
lakes, and oases. Bedrock outcrops commonly occur as small mountains surrounded by extensive erosional plains.
There are several different types of dunes. Barchan dunes are produced by strong winds blowing across a level surface and are crescent-shaped. Longitudinal or seif dunes are dunes that are parallel to a strong wind that blows in one general direction. Transverse dunes run at a right angle to the constant wind direction. Star dunes are star-shaped and have several ridges that spread out around a point.
Oases are vegetated areas moistened by
springs,
wells, or by
irrigation. Many are artificial. Oases are often the only places in deserts that support crops and permanent habitation.
Flora and fauna
Deserts have a reputation for supporting very little life, but in reality deserts often have high
biodiversity, including
animals that remain hidden during daylight hours to control body temperature or to limit moisture needs.
Vegetation

Flora of Baja California Desert, Cataviña region, Mexico
Most desert
plants are drought- or salt-tolerant, such as
xerophytes. Some store water in their leaves, roots, and stems. Other desert plants have long
taproots that penetrate to the water table if present, or have adapted to the weather by having wide-spreading
roots to absorb water from a greater
area of the ground. Another adaptation is the development of small, spiny
leaves which shed less moisture than
deciduous leaves with greater surface areas. The stems and leaves of some plants lower the surface velocity of sand-carrying winds and protect the ground from erosion. Even small fungi and microscopic plant organisms found on the soil surface (so-called ''
cryptobiotic soil'') can be a vital link in preventing erosion and providing support for other living organisms
Deserts typically have a plant cover that is sparse but enormously diverse. The giant
saguaro cacti of the
Sonoran Desert provide nests for desert birds and serve as "trees" of the desert. Saguaro grow slowly but may live up to 200 years. When 9 years old, they are about 15 centimeters (6 in) high. After about 75 years, the cacti develop their first branches. When fully grown, saguaro are 15 meters tall and weigh as much as 10 tons. They dot the Sonoran and reinforce the general impression of deserts as cactus-rich land.
Although
cacti are often thought of as characteristic desert plants, other types of plants have adapted well to the arid environment. They include the
pea and
sunflower families. Cold deserts have grasses and shrubs as dominant vegetation.
Water

The shifting sands simulator at
Questacon, Canberra
Rain ''does'' fall occasionally in deserts, and desert storms are often violent. A record 44 millimeters (1.7 in) of rain once fell within 3 hours in the Sahara. Large Saharan storms may deliver up to 1 millimeter per minute. Normally dry stream channels, called
arroyos or
wadis, can quickly fill after heavy rains, and
flash floods make these channels dangerous.
Though little rain falls in deserts, deserts receive runoff from ephemeral, or short-lived, streams fed considerable quantities of sediment for a day or two. Although most deserts are in basins with closed or interior drainage, a few deserts are crossed by 'exotic' rivers that derive their water from outside the desert. Such rivers infiltrate soils and evaporate large amounts of water on their journeys through the deserts, but their volumes are such that they maintain their continuity. The
Nile River, the
Colorado River, and the
Yellow River are exotic rivers that flow through deserts to deliver their sediments to the sea. Deserts may also have underground springs, rivers, or reservoirs that lay close to the surface, or deep underground. Plants that have not completely adapted to sporadic rainfalls in a desert environment may tap into underground water sources that do not exceed the reach of their root systems.
Lakes form where rainfall or meltwater in interior drainage basins is sufficient. Desert lakes are generally shallow, temporary, and salty. Because these lakes are shallow and have a low bottom gradient, wind stress may cause the lake waters to move over many square kilometers. When small lakes dry up, they leave a salt crust or
hardpan. The flat area of clay, silt, or sand encrusted with salt that forms is known as a playa. There are more than a hundred playas in North American deserts. Most are relics of large lakes that existed during the last
ice age about 12,000 years ago.
Lake Bonneville was a 52,000 kilometers² (20,000 mi²) lake almost 300 meters (1000 ft) deep in Utah, Nevada, and Idaho during the Ice Age. Today the remnants of Lake Bonneville include Utah's
Great Salt Lake,
Utah Lake, and
Sevier Lake. Because playas are arid landforms from a wetter past, they contain useful clues to climatic change.
When the occasional precipitation does occur, it erodes the desert rocks quickly and powerfully.Winds are the other factor that erodes deserts—they are slow yet constant.
The flat terrains of hardpans and playas make them excellent racetracks and natural runways for airplanes and spacecraft. Ground-vehicle speed records are commonly established on
Bonneville Speedway, a racetrack on the Great Salt Lake hardpan. Space shuttles land on
Rogers Lake Playa at
Edwards Air Force Base in California.
Mineral resources
Some
mineral deposits are formed, improved, or preserved by geologic processes that occur in arid lands as a consequence of climate.
Ground water leaches
ore minerals and redeposits them in zones near the
water table. This leaching process concentrates these minerals as ore that can be mined.
Evaporation in arid lands enriches mineral accumulation in their lakes. Lake beds known as
Playas may be sources of mineral deposits formed by evaporation. Water evaporating in closed basins precipitates minerals such as
gypsum, salts (including
sodium nitrate and
sodium chloride), and
borates. The minerals formed in these
evaporite deposits depend on the composition and temperature of the saline waters at the time of deposition.
Significant evaporite resources occur in the
Great Basin Desert of the United States, mineral deposits made famous by the "20-mule teams" that once hauled borax-laden wagons from
Death Valley to the
railroad.
Boron, from
borax and borate evaporites, is an essential ingredient in the manufacture of glass, enamel, agricultural chemicals, water softeners, and pharmaceuticals. Borates are mined from evaporite deposits at
Searles Lake, California, and other desert locations. The total value of chemicals that have been produced from Searles Lake substantially exceeds
US$1
billion.
The
Atacama Desert of
South America is unique among the deserts of the world in its great abundance of saline minerals. Sodium nitrate has been mined for
explosives and
fertilizer in the Atacama since the middle of the 19th century. Nearly 3 million
tonnes were mined during
World War I.
Valuable minerals located in arid lands include
copper in the United States, Chile,
Peru, and
Iran;
iron and
lead-
zinc ore in
Australia;
chromite in
Turkey; and
gold,
silver, and
uranium deposits in Australia and the United States. Nonmetallic mineral resources and rocks such as
beryllium,
mica,
lithium,
clays,
pumice, and
scoria also occur in arid regions.
Sodium carbonate,
sulfate, borate,
nitrate, lithium,
bromine,
iodine,
calcium, and
strontium compounds come from sediments and near-surface brines formed by evaporation of inland bodies of water, often during geologically recent times.
The
Green River Formation of
Colorado,
Wyoming, and
Utah contains
alluvial fan deposits and playa evaporites created in a huge lake whose level fluctuated for millions of years. Economically significant deposits of
trona, a major source of
sodium compounds, and thick layers of
oil shale were created in the arid environment.
Some of the more productive
petroleum areas on Earth are found in arid and semiarid regions of Africa and the Mideast, although the
oil fields were originally formed in shallow marine environments. Recent climate change has placed these reservoirs in an arid environment. It's noteworthy that
Ghawar, the world's largest and most productive oilfield is mostly under the
Empty Quarter and
Al-Dahna deserts.
Other oil reservoirs, however, are presumed to be eolian in origin and are presently found in humid environments. The
Rotliegendes, a
hydrocarbon reservoir in the
North Sea, is associated with extensive evaporite deposits. Many of the major U.S. hydrocarbon resources may come from eolian sands. Ancient alluvial fan sequences may also be hydrocarbon reservoirs.
Human life in deserts
A desert is a hostile, potentially deadly environment for unprepared humans. The high heat causes rapid loss of water due to
sweating, which can result in
dehydration and death within days. In addition, unprotected humans are also at risk from
heatstroke and . Despite this, some cultures have made deserts their home for thousands of years, including the
Bedouin,
Touareg and
Puebloan people. Modern technology, including advanced
irrigation systems,
desalinization and
air conditioning have made deserts much more hospitable. In the
United States and
Israel,
desert farming has found extensive use.
Trivia
★ 2006 was the International Year of Deserts and Desertification.
See also
★
Desertification
★
List of deserts
★
List of deserts by area (size)
★
List of North American deserts
References
1. http://pubs.usgs.gov/gip/deserts/what/
External links
★
Deserts
★
The Desert Biome
★
Global Deserts Outlook , a report in the
Global Environment Outlook (GEO) series.
★
Map with biodiversity scenarios for desert areas, from the Global Deserts Outlook.