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Soils

Introduction to Mississippi Soils

Elvis Presley, B. B. King, Marty Stuart, Jimmie Rodgers, Muddy Waters, Howlin’ Wolf, Leontyne Price, Bobby Gentry, Carl Jackson, Charley Pride, Tammy Wynette, Cassandra Wilson, Lester Young, Lance Bass, Sam Cooke, David Ruffin: These Mississippians represent a sampling of Mississippi Musicians Hall of Fame members.

Perhaps no other state with so few total residents has the grassroots popular culture impact of Mississippi. The impact of native state soil on individual contributors to the social-cultural fabric may be unknowable, but one thing is known: Mississippi soils are unique and support our current social, economic, and environment conditions.

Mississippi soils are diverse, reflecting:

  • the diversity of their parent materials (the raw material for soil),
  • a conducive environment (warm, humid) for rapid pedogenesis (the process of soil formation),
  • active biological activity (note the warm and humid climate), and
  • the unique topography (the lay of the land).

Mississippi has three general land regions:

  1. The Delta, a river floodplain in western Mississippi,
  2. The Brown Loam loess region (a band of soils formed in windblown material that adjoins the Delta), and
  3. The Coastal Plain (the rest of the state).

As land management transitioned after 1492 until now, the surface soils of each region led to the economic activity on them.

In the early 21st century, more than 80 percent of the state’s row-crop production, including cotton, corn, and soybeans, is on Delta soils. These relatively flat and deep soils are derived from alluvium (deposits left by flowing streams). They are very fertile and often formed into large fields conducive to mechanized agriculture.

Animal production and forestry dominate in the shallower soils of the hills of east and south Mississippi that are derived from loess (windblown materials) or Coastal Plain materials (deposited by “stationary” water).

The loess and Coastal Plain regions are subdivided into smaller units based on common soils, geology, climate, water resources, and land use. These subunits, plus the Delta, are known as Major Land Resource Areas.

More information on the individual areas, visit our Mississippi Land Resource Areas page.

Soil monolith from Natchez, MS.
A monolith of the MS state soil Natchez, that comes from the Soil Survey Division of the Natural Resources Conservation Service. Monoliths are preserved dug out soils put in display cases and hung on walls. Soils from each state in the U.S. were included in a Smithsonian exhibition in 2008.
Photo credit: NRCS/USDA
Mississippi State University Extension 130 Bost Drive Mississippi State MS 39762