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There is a certain definite pattern to the location of the world’s deserts. Almost all the deserts are confined within the
15 to 30 degrees parallels of latitude north and south of the equator
30 to 45 degrees parallels of latitude north and south of the equator
Above 30 degrees parallels of latitude north of the equator
Above 30 degrees parallels of latitude south of the equator
They lie in the trade wind belt on the western parts of the continents where Trade winds are off-shore. They are bathed by cold currents which produced a ‘desiccating effect’ so that moisture is not easily condensed into precipitation. Dryness or aridity is the key note. Such deserts are tropical hot deserts or ‘Trade wind deserts’. They include the Great Sahara Desert; Arabian, Iranian and Thar Deserts; Kalahari, Namib, and Atacama Deserts; the Great Australian Deserts and the deserts of the south-west U.S.A, and northern Mexico. In the continental interiors of the mid-latitudes, the deserts such as the Gobi and Turkestan are characterised by extremes of temperatures.
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