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Tomlin soil series

TOMLIN SERIES

Depth class: Very deep

Agricultural drainage class: Well drained

Saturated hydraulic conductivity class: Moderately high

Landform: Piedmont uplands

Landform position: Broad ridges and side slopes

Parent material: Residuum weathered from diorite, gabbro, diabase, and/or gneiss

Slope: 2 to 25 percent

 

TAONOMIC CLASS: Fine, kaolinitic, mesic Rhodic Kanhapludults

 

RANGE IN CHARACTERISTICS:

Depth to top of argillic or kandic horizon: 2 to 20 inches

Depth to base of argillic or kandic horizon: More than 25 inches

Depth to bedrock: Greater than 80 inches

Depth to seasonal high water table: Greater than 72 inches

Rock Fragment Content: 0 to 35 percent in the A and E horizons and 0 to 15 percent in the B and C horizons; mostly gravel and cobbles

Soil Reaction: Very strongly acid to moderately acid throughout, unless limed.

Mica content: 0 to 20 percent, by volume mica flakes in the A, B, and 0 to 50 percent by volume in the BC and C horizon

 

USE AND VEGETATION:

Major Uses: Cultivated crops, pasture, and forest

Dominant Vegetation: Where cultivated--small grains, corn, soybeans, hay, tobacco, and orchards. Where forested--Eastern white pine, Virginia pine, red oak, white oak, post oak, hickory, blackgum, red maple, yellow poplar, and dogwood

 

DISTRIBUTION AND EXTENT:

Distribution: Virginia and North Carolina

Extent: Moderate

 

Tomlin soils were previously mapped as Lloyd soils. The April 1997 relocation of the mesic/thermic line in North Carolina and Virginia necessitated the establishment of the Tomlin series as a mesic counterpart. Tomlin soils are commonly associated with Clifford soils (fine, kaolinitic, mesic Typic Kanhapludults). Clifford soils formed in residuum weathered from felsic crystalline rock and have B horizons with hue of 5YR or redder with moist value of 4 or more. Tomlin soils formed in mixed felsic to mafic crystalline rock (primarily amphibolite) and have B horizons with hue of 2.5YR or redder with moist value of less than 4.

 

For a detailed soil description, visit:

soilseries.sc.egov.usda.gov/OSD_Docs/T/TOMLIN.html

 

For acreage and geographic distribution, visit:

casoilresource.lawr.ucdavis.edu/see/#tomlin

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Uploaded on May 8, 2021
Taken in January 2001