 
          yourself?” Uyghur’s son muttered, “Do you know that this was an enormous village before? We
        
        
          were commanded by a rude bear called Rilakkuma, and I gave some soup to him to let become a
        
        
          frog, after a while, a storm called desert came, I don’t know why it was called desert, but the old
        
        
          guys said it was desert, after the storm, only was left. I felt very lonely and decided to leave my
        
        
          beloved village. Fifteen days later, I was too tired and lied down to have a sleep. Fortunately, you
        
        
          came.” “This was terrible! We can take my camel together and ride.” said the woman. Uyghur’s son
        
        
          thanked her and they rode together on the camel.
        
        
          The old woman was very creative. She gave a name to the place where the smurf’s village
        
        
          has located before. It was “The Gobi Desert”, the word “Gobi” was the word “desert” in Uyghur
        
        
          language. The Gobi Desert was the one the real Gobi Desert in nowadays. It was located in the Silk
        
        
          Road of the North West China and in the South of Mongolia. There were many fossils found and
        
        
          many camels lived there. The fossils may be the smurf’s body! The Gobi Desert has 1295000km2,
        
        
          so imagine how enormous that the smurf’s village is! The Gobi is a cold desert, with frost and
        
        
          occasionally snow occurring on its dunes. Besides being quite far north, it is also located on a
        
        
          plateau roughly 910-1,520 metres (2,990-4,990 ft) above saw level, which contributes to its low
        
        
          temperatures. The real reason why The Gobi Desert has become a desert is that the expansion is
        
        
          particularly rapid on the southern edge into China, which has seen 3,660 km2 (1,390 sq mi) of
        
        
          grassland overtaken every year by the Gobi Desert. Dust storms, which used to occur regularly in
        
        
          China, have increased in frequency in the past 20 years, mainly due to desertification.