Creedmoor soil series
The Creedmoor soils are very deep, moderately well drained and somewhat poorly drained, very slowly permeable soils that have formed in residuum weathered from Triassic material of the Piedmont uplands. Slopes range from 0 to 15 percent.
TAXONOMIC CLASS: Fine, mixed, semiactive, thermic Aquic Hapludults
USE AND VEGETATION: About one-third of the soil is under cultivation or in pasture, and the remainder in forest of shortleaf and loblolly pine, oaks, hickory, and gum. Common crops are tobacco, small grains, corn, cotton, and truck crops.
DISTRIBUTION AND EXTENT: The Piedmont of Virginia, North Carolina, and possibly South Carolina. The series is extensive; the area is more than 100,000 acres.
Creedmoor soil series
The Creedmoor soils are very deep, moderately well drained and somewhat poorly drained, very slowly permeable soils that have formed in residuum weathered from Triassic material of the Piedmont uplands. Slopes range from 0 to 15 percent.
TAXONOMIC CLASS: Fine, mixed, semiactive, thermic Aquic Hapludults
USE AND VEGETATION: About one-third of the soil is under cultivation or in pasture, and the remainder in forest of shortleaf and loblolly pine, oaks, hickory, and gum. Common crops are tobacco, small grains, corn, cotton, and truck crops.
DISTRIBUTION AND EXTENT: The Piedmont of Virginia, North Carolina, and possibly South Carolina. The series is extensive; the area is more than 100,000 acres.