Tate soil and landscape
Soil profile: A representative soil profile of the Tate series. (Soil Survey of Polk County, North Carolina; by Scott C. Keenen, Natural Resources Conservation Service)
Landscape: Grass-legume hay and Christmas trees on Tate loam, 2 to 7 percent slopes. Tate soils are on colluvial fans, foot slopes, and benches in coves in the Blue Ridge (MLRA 130). Elevation ranges from 1400 to 4000 feet. The soil formed in colluvium weathered from felsic to mafic high-grade metamorphic rocks such as granite, mica gneiss, hornblende gneiss, and schist. (Soil Survey of Smyth County, Virginia; by Robert K. Conner, Natural Resources Conservation Service)
The Tate series consists of very deep, well drained, moderately permeable soils. They formed in colluvium weathered from felsic to mafic high-grade metamorphic rocks. Mean annual temperature is 52 degrees F., and mean annual precipitation about 52 inches near the type location. Slope ranges from 2 to 50 percent.
TAXONOMIC CLASS: Fine-loamy, mixed, semiactive, mesic Typic Hapludults
Thickness of the solum ranges from 24 to more than 60 inches. Depth to bedrock is greater than 60 inches. Content of rock fragments is less than 35 percent by volume in the A and Bt horizons, and less than 60 percent in the BC and C horizons. The soil is very strongly acid to slightly acid unless limed. Content of mica flakes is few or common.
USE AND VEGETATION: About half is cleared and used for growing corn, small grain, tobacco, truck crops, and pasture. Common trees in forested areas are scarlet oak, white oak, yellow-poplar, eastern white pine, shortleaf pine, Virginia pine, and northern red oak. Understory plants include mountain-laurel, rhododendron, blueberry, greenbrier, flowering dogwood, black locust, honeysuckle, sourwood, and flame azalea.
DISTRIBUTION AND EXTENT: The Blue Ridge (MLRA 130) of North Carolina, Virginia, eastern Tennessee, and possibly Georgia and South Carolina. The series has large extent.
For additional information about the survey area, visit:
www.nrcs.usda.gov/Internet/FSE_MANUSCRIPTS/north_carolina...
and...
www.nrcs.usda.gov/Internet/FSE_MANUSCRIPTS/virginia/VA173...
For a detailed soil description, visit:
soilseries.sc.egov.usda.gov/OSD_Docs/T/TATE.html
For acreage and geographic distribution, visit:
casoilresource.lawr.ucdavis.edu/see/#tate
Tate soil and landscape
Soil profile: A representative soil profile of the Tate series. (Soil Survey of Polk County, North Carolina; by Scott C. Keenen, Natural Resources Conservation Service)
Landscape: Grass-legume hay and Christmas trees on Tate loam, 2 to 7 percent slopes. Tate soils are on colluvial fans, foot slopes, and benches in coves in the Blue Ridge (MLRA 130). Elevation ranges from 1400 to 4000 feet. The soil formed in colluvium weathered from felsic to mafic high-grade metamorphic rocks such as granite, mica gneiss, hornblende gneiss, and schist. (Soil Survey of Smyth County, Virginia; by Robert K. Conner, Natural Resources Conservation Service)
The Tate series consists of very deep, well drained, moderately permeable soils. They formed in colluvium weathered from felsic to mafic high-grade metamorphic rocks. Mean annual temperature is 52 degrees F., and mean annual precipitation about 52 inches near the type location. Slope ranges from 2 to 50 percent.
TAXONOMIC CLASS: Fine-loamy, mixed, semiactive, mesic Typic Hapludults
Thickness of the solum ranges from 24 to more than 60 inches. Depth to bedrock is greater than 60 inches. Content of rock fragments is less than 35 percent by volume in the A and Bt horizons, and less than 60 percent in the BC and C horizons. The soil is very strongly acid to slightly acid unless limed. Content of mica flakes is few or common.
USE AND VEGETATION: About half is cleared and used for growing corn, small grain, tobacco, truck crops, and pasture. Common trees in forested areas are scarlet oak, white oak, yellow-poplar, eastern white pine, shortleaf pine, Virginia pine, and northern red oak. Understory plants include mountain-laurel, rhododendron, blueberry, greenbrier, flowering dogwood, black locust, honeysuckle, sourwood, and flame azalea.
DISTRIBUTION AND EXTENT: The Blue Ridge (MLRA 130) of North Carolina, Virginia, eastern Tennessee, and possibly Georgia and South Carolina. The series has large extent.
For additional information about the survey area, visit:
www.nrcs.usda.gov/Internet/FSE_MANUSCRIPTS/north_carolina...
and...
www.nrcs.usda.gov/Internet/FSE_MANUSCRIPTS/virginia/VA173...
For a detailed soil description, visit:
soilseries.sc.egov.usda.gov/OSD_Docs/T/TATE.html
For acreage and geographic distribution, visit:
casoilresource.lawr.ucdavis.edu/see/#tate