Yes,
I used to live in the Sonoran Desert, which covers parts of California, Arizona and the state of Sonora in Mexico. It does snow there from time to time. In fact, we had a white out in Tucson, AZ on Easter 2000 or 2001. It was brief and didn't accumulate, but it DID snow.
The mountain ranges surrounding Tucson (Rincons, Santa Ritas, Tuscons, Catalinas and Tortolitas) all gather a bit of white at the peaks. I went for a hike in the Catalinas on Mt Lemmon, which reaches 9,157 ft above sea level. It was April but there was snow so deep that the waist high trail markers were protruding thru the snow, hovering an inch or so above the powder.
It also snows in the Mojave Desert, which lies just north of the Sonoran, and covers parts of California, Utah, Nevada and Arizona. The Mojave Desert can be called the High Desert, with the Sonoran Desert referred to as the Low Desert.
Yes, and many of Alborz and Zagors mountains are known to have snow on them all year round.
Sometimes ! especially in Ifran and Souira and also Tangier
umm I don't really know but i don't think so.
On top of Mt Sibiris in Sanaag region, 7500 feet, it could very well snow.
Yes, in the Andes Mountains
No.
Somalia hasn't known reserves of uranium.
southwest of Somalia
Somalia is a very modest and poor country.
1000,532 people die During the war in Somalia that is the Estimate
Botswant is slightly larger that, Kenya, which lies astride the equator.
It does not snow in Somalia because it is too close to the equator. While it can still snow at such low latitudes, it requires high elevations which are not present in this countries.
Brazil, Uganda, Kenya, Somalia, Indonesia and others including Equador, where it crosses the snow covered Andes Mountains.
somalia
somalia
Somalia
Somalia is in the continent of Africa.
Somalia does not have head
SOMALIA NEVER HAD A QUEEN.
Somalia was in Commonwealth in 1953.
Somalia is bigger
In North East of Somalia
25% of the Youth in Somalia.