Polar desert
Polar deserts are areas with annual precipitation less than 250 millimeters and a mean temperature during the warmest month of less than 10 °C. Polar deserts on Earth cover nearly 5 million square kilometers and are mostly hard bedrock or gravel plains. Sand dunes are not prominent features in these deserts, but snow dunes occur commonly in areas where precipitation is locally more abundant. Temperature changes in polar deserts frequently cross the freezing point of water. This "freeze-thaw" alternation forms patterned textures on the ground, as much as 5 meters in diameter.
Most of the interior of Antarctica is polar desert, despite the thick ice cover. Conversely, the McMurdo Dry Valleys of Antarctica, although they have had no ice for thousands of years, are not necessarily polar desert: they are kept "dry" by katabatic wind.
Polar deserts are relatively common during ice ages, as ice ages tend to be dry.[citation needed]
References
This article incorporates public domain material from the United States Geological Survey document: Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
See also
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