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"Stuttgart" the Arkansas State Soil
Stuttgart soils are named for the City of Stuttgart in Southeast
Arkansas. They are used primarily for cropland with the
dominant crops being rice, soybeans, small grains, and corn. The
Stuttgart area is famous for its large fall and winter population of
ducks and geese. These waterfowl feed heavily on the crops grown
on the Stuttgart soils. Stuttgart soils have been mapped on about
200,000 acres in Arkansas. The Stuttgart series consists of very
deep moderately well to somewhat poorly drained soils formed in silty
and clayey alluvium. These level to gently sloping soils are
on Prairie terraces in the Lower Mississippi Valley. Stuttgart's
silt loam surface texture and the slow permeability in its clayey
subsoil makes the soil ideal for rice population.
Typical Stuttgart Soil Profile
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Surface: 0 to 11 inches - dark grayish brown and
grayish brown silt loam
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Subsurface: 11 to 23 inches - yellowish brown silt
loam
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Subsoil: 23 - 35 inches - red silty clay;
35 - 80 inches - grayish brown and light brownish gray silty clay
loam
Soil Family
Classification
Fine,
smectitic, thermic Albaquultic Hapludalfs
Stuttgart soils are in the Alfisols soil order.
Alfisols are mostly soils of intermediate age. The "Albaquultic"
subgroup implies that the soil has an abrupt textural change, has a
moderately high water table during part of the year, and that the base
saturation is less than 60 percent at 50 inches below the top of the
subsoil. The term "fine" indicates that the upper subsoil
averages between 35 and 60 percent clay. The term "smectitic"
implies that the clay in the subsoil is dominated by minerals that expand
upon wetting and contract upon drying. "Thermic" refers to an
average annual soil temperature of between 15o to 22oC
(59o to 72oF).
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