Newport Soil Series
Newport Soil Series
Official State Soil of Rhode Island
State Soil of Rhode Island
- Status
- Official state soil
Rhode Island State Soil
Newport soil formed from glacial till — a mixture of sand, gravel, and rock fragments deposited directly by the Laurentide ice sheet as it retreated from New England roughly 17,000 years ago. The till was derived from granite, gneiss, and schist bedrock ground up by glaciers advancing from Canada. When the ice melted, it left behind a blanket of this rocky material across the Rhode Island uplands.
Newport is an Inceptisol, a young soil order that has not weathered long enough to develop the clay-rich argillic horizons of older Alfisols or Ultisols. Its defining feature is a cambic horizon — a weakly developed subsoil where iron and other compounds have begun to move and accumulate, giving it a slightly brighter yellowish brown color than the surface.
The most distinctive structural feature of Newport soil is its dense basal till layer — a compact, nearly impenetrable lower horizon that was compressed under the weight of the glacier. This Cd layer stops roots and restricts water movement at roughly three feet, effectively defining the working depth of the soil.
Why Rhode Island Chose the Newport Soil
The Newport series is named after Newport, Rhode Island, the historic city on Aquidneck Island whose harbor and surrounding uplands were among the first areas in the state where European settlers mapped and farmed the glaciated till soils. USDA soil scientists name series after towns, rivers, or geographic features near where each series was first formally described.
The Soil Science Society of America recognizes Newport as Rhode Island's state soil because it is the most widespread series in the state, covering the upland glaciated terrain that defines Rhode Island's physical landscape from Providence County to the Washington County coast. In a state of only 1,212 square miles, one series represents the land more completely than would be possible in a larger state.
Newport was chosen over the sandy outwash soils of the coastal lowlands because the till uplands cover a larger share of the state's total area. The series captures both the geological signature of glaciation — compact, stony till from New England bedrock — and the forested character of the landscape before and after the farming era.
Newport Soil Profile and Horizons
Digging into Newport soil reveals a profile shaped entirely by glacial ice. The dark surface is loose sandy loam, softened by organic matter from decades of fallen leaves. Below it, the cambic subsoil shifts from dark yellowish brown to olive as iron slowly leaches downward. At roughly three feet, the shovel hits the dense basal till — a layer so compact from glacial compression that it barely changes whether wet or dry.
Where Newport Soil Grows in Rhode Island
Newport soil covers the glaciated upland terrain of Rhode Island, the rolling to hilly land above the coastal lowlands and river valleys. It is found wherever compact glacial till from granite and gneiss bedrock sits close enough to the surface to dominate the profile. Because Rhode Island is small and its geology is largely uniform till over metamorphic bedrock, Newport soil is found in every county in the state.
The soil is most extensive in the upland areas of Providence and Kent counties in the northern and central part of the state, and across the Washington County uplands in the south. It also covers the rocky till terrain of Newport County on Aquidneck Island and surrounding peninsulas.
Farming and Forests on Newport Soil
Newport soil is not highly productive farmland. The dense basal till restricts rooting depth, the glacial parent material is low in nutrients, and the acidic pH — typically between 4.5 and 5.5 — limits what grows without liming. Rhode Island's agricultural output has always been modest compared to neighboring states, and Newport soil's limitations explain part of that pattern.
Dairy farming was the historic use of Newport soil uplands through the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Small dairy herds grazed the cleared upland fields, and the same farms grew potatoes, corn, and hay to support both livestock and household needs. By the mid-twentieth century most of Rhode Island's dairy farms had closed as land values and development pressure rose.
Nursery plants, sod, and Christmas trees are the modern crops grown on Newport soil farmland. The well-drained, acidic profile suits nursery stock and conifer plantations. Market gardens producing sweet corn, squash, and tomatoes operate on the better-drained Newport soil slopes near Providence and Warwick.
Where Newport soil remains forested — the majority of the state's land cover — white oak, scarlet oak, red maple, and pitch pine are the dominant species. Highbush blueberry and black huckleberry grow in the understory, exploiting the acidic, low-nutrient profile that suits ericaceous shrubs. The same soil conditions produce the scrubby pitch pine and bear oak barrens in the sandy transitions near the coast.
Newport Soil Facts
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What is Rhode Island's state soil?
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Sources
- USDA NRCS — Official Series Description, Newport Series
- Soil Science Society of America — State Soils
- University of Rhode Island Cooperative Extension — Soils of Rhode Island
- USDA NRCS Rhode Island — Web Soil Survey
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