Transcript Hot Deserts

Climatic Regions
Deserts
What do you think of when you
think of deserts?
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Deserts
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Do you think of…
There are two types of deserts…
Cold Deserts
e.g. Antartica
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Hot Deserts
e.g. Sahara
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Though the temperature can vary, all deserts are
defined by an extreme lack of precipitation,
between 100 – 250 mm a year
Hot Deserts:
Hot and dry
Egypt
Hot Deserts: Hot and dry
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Hot deserts are very dry
between 0 to 250 mm per
year of rainfall
Very hot usually up to 30°C
every day but
temperatures of 50°C have
been recorded
There is a huge difference
between night and day
temperatures (up to 40°C
of a drop) because there is
no cloud to keep the heat
in
The location of hot deserts
15° & 30°
North &
South of
the
Equator
Can you name any of these deserts?
Famous Deserts
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Sahara
Gobi desert
Kalahari desert
Arabian desert
Australian desert
Atacama desert
Sonoran
(Nevada/Mojave)
desert
Sahara
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Location: North Africa
Size: 9 million sq km
Temperature: Up to 45°C
in the day: down to -7 °C at
night
Rainfall: Less than 100mm
per year
Facts:
 In Arabic, Sahara means
desert (no need to say
Sahara desert!)
 The biggest desert on
Earth – as big as the USA
 About 1/5 is sand – the
rest is rocks and pebbles
 About 6,000 years ago, it
was green and wet with
crocs and elephants
Atacama Desert
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Location: South America,
Peru, Chile
Size: 7 million sq km
Temperature: Up to 45°C in
the day: down to -7 °C at
night
Rainfall: Less than 100mm
per year
Facts:
 It is officially the driest
place on earth – some parts
received no rain for 400
years!
Gobi
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Location: Central Asia
(China and Mongolia)
Size: 1,040,000 sq km
Temperature: Hot summers
up to 45°C, very cold
winters down to -40°C
Rainfall: 50-100mm per
year
Facts:
 In Mongolian it means
“waterless place”
 It is the coldest hot desert in
the world
 It is mostly rock and stones
and very mountainous
 It is home to Bactrian camels
The formation of
deserts
Deserts form for a number of reasons…
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Rain Shadows
As the air rises, it cools and drops
all its water in the form of rain
After the mountain, the air is dry and therefore there is no rain. This
dry area is called a rain shadow. Deserts often form in rain shadows.
Inland/Continental Deserts
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Normally, winds
coming from the sea
have lots of water
which falls as rain
on land
However, some
areas are so far
away from the sea
that the clouds and
so rain do not reach
them
High Pressure Deserts
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The sun at the
equator heats and
dries the air
The air rises (hot air
balloon)
The hot air then cools
down and sinks
There is little or no
evaporation and so no
rain (the water cycle)
So a desert forms
Costal/Cold Current Deserts
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The air over cold
currents of water is
cold
This cold air does not
rise and form clouds
This cold dry air gets
blown over the coast
but does not have
enough water to fall
as rain
A mist can form in the
morning
Just sand?
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The sand in the desert
is constantly moving
The wind is one of the
main shapers of the
desert, creating lines,
cresent and star shapes
etc in the sand
Erosion in the desert
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Sand can be blasted
against rock by the
wind forming unusual
shapes of rocks
When it does rain, a
huge amount of water
falls very quickly. This
causes flash flood
that can cause huge
damage
Conclusion
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What have you learned today?
Did anything surprise you?
Would you like to live in the desert? Why?
Summary
There are two types of deserts – cold and hot
Hot deserts are very hot and dry
There are many deserts around the world - can
you name any?
Deserts are formed in a number of ways - van you
name them?
Homework
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Name the deserts on
the handout
Read page 81-86
Looking at the position
of the Sahara desert,
suggest a reason why
it might have formed
here. Explain in as
much detail as
possible.