Kilometers
 of sand, rocks, sandbanks, and sceneries evoking lunar landscapes are 
all about a journey in a desert and are certainly, a unique adventure. 
All the deserts are not the same. Here are the most unusual deserts of 
the world.
01. A Desert With Lagoons - Lencois Maranhenses, Brasil
Amazingly stretched in Brazil, it
 is almost impossible to believe that the desert where water has no word
 is full of lagoons. Situated in the State of Maranhao on the north 
shore, this desert is in the Lencois Maranhenses National Park where 
white dunes and blue lagoons have a contrasting match.
Photo Link
 The lagoons are formed due to 
rain drops that accumulate on the depression between dunes forming small
 ponds of clear water. You can see them only after winters but before 
summers where species of fish, turtles, and clams live.
02. The Colorful Desert - Painted Desert, USA
 Photo Link 
The Painted Desert (Arizona) is 
an expanse of badland hills, flat-topped mesas and buttes. It is an arid
 land, sparsely vegetated and heavily eroded. The name Painted Desert 
refers to the rainbow of colorful sedimentary layers exposed in the 
austere landscape. 
 Photo Link
The landforms of the Painted 
Desert have been described as a multicolored layer cake. The variety of 
hues in the sandstone and mudstone layers of the Chinle Formation is the
 result of the varying mineral content in the sediments and the rate at 
which the sediments were laid down.  
03. Officially the World's Smallest Desert - Carcross Desert, Canada
Photo Link 
The Carcross Desert (located 
outside Carcross village, Yukon) is affectionately known as the world's 
smallest desert. The dry climate and wind conditions have created sand 
dunes and forced special vegetation to adapt to the surroundings. The 
Carcoss Desert measures approximately 1 square mile (2.6 km2), or 640 
acres.
04. The World's Largest Gypsum Desert - White Sands, USA
Photo Link 
Rising from the heart of the 
Tularosa Basin is one of the world's great natural wonders - the 
glistening white sands of New Mexico. Here, dunes have engulfed 275 sq 
mi (712 sq km) of desert creating the world's largest gypsum desert. 
White Sands has amazing sand dunes. Some of these are over 40 feet  (12 
m) tall. Unlike other desert sands, it is cool to the touch, due to the 
high rate of evaporation of surface moisture and the fact that the sands
 reflect, rather than absorb, the sun's rays.
05. The Black Desert - Egypt
 Photo Link
The Black Desert is a region of 
volcano-shaped mountains with large quantities of small black stones. 
The stones lie out across the orange-brown ground, so that it is not 
quite as black as many people may hope for. Climbing one of the many 
soft peeks, the view from the top is really nice, with similar peeks 
continuing on into the haze. The Black Desert is uninhabited, and there 
are no amenities here. 
06. The World's Largest Salt Desert - Salar de Uyuni, Bolivia
 Photo Link
 This
 desert, located in Bolivia would change your conception of the idea of 
deserts completely. It happens to be the largest salt desert in the 
world but the beauty of the place is exceptional. The desert is 
completely flat and the so large and crystal in its salty nature that 
the whole sky seems to be reflected in it creating the ground in 
different shades of blue. Another beautiful aspect of the desert is the 
numerous lakes that you will find here, these lakes are in multiple 
colors because of the minerals that make it up. The effect of these 
soothing colors is remarkable.
Extracted salt sits in piles   
 Photo Link
Salar de Uyuni is the world's 
largest salt flat at 10,582 sq km (4,086 sq mi). The Salar contains 
large amounts of sodium, potassium, lithium and magnesium, as well as 
borax. It is estimated to contain 10 billion tonnes of salt, of which 
less than 25,000 tonnes is extracted annually.
07. Driest Desert in the World - Atacama, Chile
 Photo Link
According to NASA reports, the 
Atacama desert in Chile is the driest desert in the world. National 
Geographic has also verified that the Atacama is the driest desert. The 
Atacama Desert in Chile is over 50 time’s drier that Death Valley in 
California. The desert covers over 40.600 sq mi (105.000 sq km) and is 
mostly comprised of salt basins, lava flows, and sand. The average rain 
fall in the region is just one millimeter per year. Some weather 
stations in the desert have never reported any rainfall. The weather is 
so arid that even the mountain peaks that reach over 6,500 m (21 000 ft)
 have no glaciers.
08. A Desert Covered With Snowfall - Taklamakan, China
 Photo Link
 Taklamakan is one of the largest
 sandy deserts in the world, ranking 15th in size in a ranking of the 
world's largest non-polar deserts. It covers an area of 270,000 sq km 
(100,000 sq mi) of the Tarim Basin, 1,000 kilometres (620 mi) long and 
400 kilometres (250 mi) wide. It is crossed at its northern and at its 
southern edges by two branches of the silk road as travelers sought to 
avoid the arid wasteland.
 Photo Link
In 2008, China's biggest desert 
experienced its biggest snowfall and lowest temperature after 11 
consecutive days of snow. Snow is rare in the desert that covered 
337,600 sq km (130 sq mi), never before had the whole desert been 
covered.
09. The Red Sand Desert - Simpson Desert, Australia
 Photo Link
Located in Australia and regarded
 as one of its four large deserts, the Simpson Desert is simply amazing 
because of the red sand dunes. Not only is this attractive, but another 
mesmerizing aspect is that it holds the longest parallel dunes on the 
planet, which are north-south static lines affixed due to vegetation. 
With varying heights from 3 m to 30 m (10-100 ft), the most famous dune 
is the Big Red at 40 m (130 ft).
Australian Simpson Desert Plants 
Photo Link
Although the 
Simpson Desert is a harsh environment, native, spiny grasses known as 
spinefex bind the loose sand and provide a habitat for over 180 bird 
species and for lizards and marsupials.
 














 
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