malpais
mal-pie-EES
Rough, broken terrain of dark volcanic rock — a lava field too jagged and barren to cross or cultivate. The malpais of the American Southwest (El Malpais in New Mexico, the Pinacate in Sonora) are landscapes of frozen black stone, the surface sharp enough to shred boot leather, supporting little beyond lichens and the occasional juniper rooted in a crack.
Etymology
Spanish — mal (bad) + país (country). Bad country — land that resists human use.
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