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Caption
Geologists call eroded landscapes such as the Painted Desert "badlands." Summer thunderstorms and winter snowmelt carve the shale and sanddstone into mazes of sharp ridges, steep hillsides, and deep V-shaped gullies. Practically waterless, badlands support few plants.
Bandlands exist only in dry regions with sparse vegetation. Soft bandland sediments, unprotected by plants or by overlying harder caprock, are easily stripped away by infrequent rains. The remaining manycolored hills--with colors derived from chemicals that formed their rock--almost appear to be melting.
Badlands are found throughout the world. Here in the United States, Badlands National Park in South Dakota, Bryce Canyon National Park un Utah, Death Valley National Monument in California, and Theodore Roosevelt National Park in North Dakota also preserve examples of badlands.