Official state symbol Mississippi State Soil Adopted 2003

Natchez Silt Loam

Rocky creek channel bordered by trees and low banks.

Natchez Silt Loam

Official State Soil of Mississippi

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Artsiom Dusau Reviewed by Artsiom Dusau
Overview

State Soil of Mississippi

Mississippi's state soil is the Natchez Silt Loam — a deep, wind-built soil covering 171,559 acres of steep bluff hills along the full length of western Mississippi, formed from Ice Age silt blown off the Mississippi River floodplain. The Mississippi Legislature designated it the official state soil on March 13, 2003, through House Bill 1273. This profile appears in the list of U.S. state soils.
Adopted
2003
Status
Official state soil

Mississippi State Soil

The Natchez Silt Loam is Mississippi's official state soil. It sits on the bluff hills — a narrow belt of steep, loess-covered hillsides that runs along the entire western edge of the state, from the Tennessee border to the Louisiana line, rising above the Mississippi River floodplain.

Natchez is an Inceptisol: a relatively young soil that has not yet developed the thick clay-enriched layers of older soils. What it has instead is depth — loess deposits up to 50 feet thick in the most dramatic bluffs — and natural fertility from the minerals packed into every grain of wind-blown silt.

Why Mississippi Chose the Natchez Silt Loam

In 1988, the Professional Soil Classifiers Association of Mississippi, working with soil scientists at Mississippi State University, selected Natchez silt loam to represent the state's soil resources. The criteria were coverage, productivity, and significance to Mississippi's agricultural and natural history.

It took 15 more years for the Legislature to act. Representative Reecy Dickson of Macon sponsored House Bill 1273, noting that 15 other states had already officially designated state soils. The Mississippi Legislature passed the bill, and it was signed into law on March 13, 2003.

The Natchez series was named after the city of Natchez — itself named after the Natchez people, a Native American nation who built their civilization on these same loess bluffs long before European contact. The soil series, the city, and the people share one name.

Natchez Silt Loam Soil Profile and Horizons

Measured Natchez Silt Loam profile with distinct horizons exposed beside a scale
A measured Natchez Silt Loam profile exposes the horizon sequence soil scientists use to identify the series. Official USDA descriptions classify soils by recurring depth, texture, drainage, and parent material patterns.

Natchez silt loam has a straightforward profile: a thin, darker surface layer above a yellowish-brown subsoil, all sitting on the pale, deep loess that continues far below. What makes it unusual is how uniform it is — silt loam from top to bottom, all the way down through the bluff.

The slope is the story here, not the layers. These hillsides run from 12 to 60 percent grade — steep enough that a person standing on them leans into the hill. The soil is fertile and deep, but water moves across it fast, and any ground cover removed from these slopes erodes quickly.

0" 9" 27" 0" 20"
A
Bw
C1
C2
Surface layer 0–9 in
silt loam
thin organic layer from forest litter; mixes into loess
Cambic subsoil 9–27 in
silt loam
weathered zone; minerals breaking down; no clay accumulation yet
Upper loess 27–49 in
silt loam
wind-deposited loess parent material; uniform from here to 50 feet
Deep loess 49–66+ in
silt loam
loess continues well beyond 66 inches in the tallest bluffs; in some locations the deposit runs more than 50 feet deep

Where Natchez Silt Loam Soil Grows in Mississippi

Wooded creek and low bluff banks in western Mississippi
Shallow water, wooded banks, and loess-cut ground evoke the bluff country that rises above the Mississippi River plain in the Brown Loam region.

Natchez silt loam covers 171,559 acres — less than one percent of Mississippi — but its footprint stretches the full length of the state. It sits in the narrow band of bluff hills that rises above the Mississippi River alluvial plain on the west and the Yazoo Basin on the east, running from the Tennessee border to the Louisiana border.

This zone is called the Brown Loam region, or the Bluff Hills. The soil sits on hillsides so steep — often 30 to 60 percent grade — that most of it has never been farmed. The bluffs outside Yazoo City are among the most dramatic examples, rising sharply above the flatlands below.

Beyond Mississippi, the Natchez series also appears in Arkansas, Louisiana, and Tennessee, wherever the same loess deposits from the glacial-era Mississippi River reach the bluffs. Mississippi has the largest and deepest concentrations.

Natchez Silt Loam · 8 counties
Other counties

Farming and Forests on Natchez Silt Loam Soil

Freshly planted rows across a broad Mississippi field
Straight planted rows on gentler ground reflect the smaller share of Natchez land that can be farmed where slopes ease and erosion is controlled.

Most Natchez silt loam is too steep to farm. Slopes of 12 to 60 percent mean water runs off fast, and any disturbed ground erodes quickly. The soil's main use is timber, and it is very good at it.

Loblolly pine reaches a site index of 90 to 100 on Natchez silt loam — good growing conditions for commercial timber. Cherrybark oak, white ash, and sweetgum reach a site index of 105 — excellent hardwood timber. These species define the natural forest of the Mississippi loess bluffs.

Where slopes are gentler — under 12 percent — farmers grow pasture, hay, and row crops. The soil is naturally fertile and productive when well managed, but maintaining ground cover is essential on any slope to prevent erosion. The loess is fine and uniform enough that once it starts moving, it moves fast.

The loess bluffs historically supported a mix of beech, magnolia, white oak, and other southern hardwoods. Many of those forests were cleared during the antebellum plantation era, and the bluffs that were farmed or grazed without care eroded severely. The steep, straight-sided bluff faces visible today are partly natural and partly the result of 200 years of land use.

Natchez Silt Loam Facts

Quick Answers

What is Mississippi's state soil?
Mississippi's state soil is the Natchez Silt Loam, a deep, wind-built soil found on the steep bluff hills along the full length of western Mississippi. The Legislature designated it the official state soil on March 13, 2003.
Why is it called Natchez silt loam?
The series is named after the city of Natchez in Adams County, Mississippi, which sits on the loess bluffs where this soil is most dramatic. The city was named after the Natchez people, a Native American nation who lived on these bluffs before European settlement.
What color is Natchez silt loam?
The surface layer is dark grayish brown. Below that, the subsoil turns dark yellowish brown. The deep loess parent material is yellowish brown — a pale, uniform color that continues dozens of feet below the surface.
Where is Natchez silt loam found in Mississippi?
Natchez silt loam runs along the full western edge of Mississippi in the bluff hills that rise above the Mississippi River floodplain. The belt runs from the Tennessee border to the Louisiana border, with the most dramatic bluffs in Adams County near the city of Natchez.
What grows in Natchez silt loam?
Most Natchez silt loam is too steep to farm, so timber is the primary use. Loblolly pine, cherrybark oak, white ash, and sweetgum grow well here. On gentler slopes, farmers grow pasture and some row crops. The soil is naturally fertile but erodes easily if left without plant cover.
Who chose Natchez silt loam as Mississippi's state soil?
The Professional Soil Classifiers Association of Mississippi, working with Mississippi State University soil scientists, chose Natchez in 1988. Representative Reecy Dickson of Macon sponsored the bill that made it official in 2003, noting that 15 other states had already designated state soils.
How deep is Natchez silt loam?
The soil profile runs at least 66 inches deep, and the underlying loess — the wind-deposited silt that formed the bluffs — can exceed 50 feet in depth. Bedrock is much deeper. It is one of the deepest soils in the South.

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