Barrow, Hall, and Jackson Counties, Georgia

Survey Area GA606 Georgia

The dominant drainage class is Well drained and the dominant hydrologic group is B (moderate infiltration). The most common soil order is Ultisols — strongly weathered soils with clay-enriched subsoils, common in warm humid climates. This report summarizes the major soil map units across the survey area to help you understand what to expect when buying, building, or gardening in Barrow, Hall, and Jackson Counties, Georgia. Search your address to find the exact soil composition, drainage, and series details at your specific location.

Soil Map UnitAcresDrainageHydro GroupDwellingsSeptic
Pacolet soils, 10 to 15 percent slopes, eroded 105K Well drainedBSomewhat limitedSomewhat limited
Cecil sandy clay loam, 6 to 10 percent slopes, eroded 73K Well drainedBNot limitedSomewhat limited
Pacolet sandy loam, 15 to 25 percent slopes 43K Well drainedBVery limitedVery limited
Cecil sandy loam, 6 to 10 percent slopes 42K Well drainedBNot limitedSomewhat limited
Cecil sandy loam, 2 to 6 percent slopes 38K Well drainedBNot limitedSomewhat limited
Madison sandy clay loam, 10 to 15 percent slopes, moderately eroded 37K Well drainedBSomewhat limitedSomewhat limited
Pacolet-Tallapoosa association, steep 27K Well drainedBVery limitedVery limited
Water 26K Not ratedNot rated
Madison sandy clay loam, 6 to 10 percent slopes, moderately eroded 22K Well drainedBNot limitedSomewhat limited
Gwinnett clay loam, 10 to 25 percent slopes, eroded 20K Well drainedBVery limitedVery limited
Madison sandy loam, 15 to 25 percent slopes 16K Well drainedBVery limitedVery limited
Appling sandy loam, 6 to 10 percent slopes 16K Well drainedBNot limitedSomewhat limited
Gwinnett clay loam, 6 to 10 percent slopes, eroded 15K Well drainedBNot limitedSomewhat limited
Cartecay and Chewacla soils 14K Somewhat poorly drainedA/DVery limitedVery limited
Toccoa soils 14K Moderately well drainedAVery limitedVery limited
Rion-Wateree complex, 10 to 25 percent slopes 12K Well drainedBVery limitedVery limited
Musella cobbly clay loam, 15 to 35 percent slopes 10K Well drainedDVery limitedVery limited
Appling sandy loam, 2 to 6 percent slopes 10K Well drainedBNot limitedSomewhat limited
Madison sandy loam, 2 to 6 percent slopes 8K Well drainedBNot limitedSomewhat limited
Madison sandy loam, 6 to 10 percent slopes 8K Well drainedBNot limitedSomewhat limited

Soil Orders in This Area

The USDA classifies every soil into one of 12 soil orders. Here are the dominant orders found in this survey area.

Ultisols
Strongly weathered clay soils of the Southeast. Acidic and naturally low in nutrients. Clay subsoil can slow drainage.
Inceptisols
Young but developing soils found in mountains and river terraces. Variable properties — check drainage and bedrock depth.
Entisols
Young soils with little development — found on floodplains, dunes, and steep slopes. Properties vary widely by setting.

What This Means

Building & Foundations

About 28% of soils have significant building limitations, while the rest are generally suitable. Check specific sites carefully — conditions vary across the area.

Septic Systems

About 28% of soils have significant septic limitations, while others are more suitable. A perc test is essential — conditions vary across the area.

Gardening & Agriculture

Well-drained soils on sloped terrain — good for most plants but watch for erosion. Terracing, contour planting, and mulching help retain moisture and topsoil. Drip irrigation is more effective than sprinklers on slopes.

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