Red Apedal B Horizon
This horizon has red colours and a weak, cheese-like structure and underlies a topsoil horizon or a yellow-brown apedal B horizon. It is suitable for intensive utilisation.
Yellow-Brown Apedal B Horizon
This horizon is yellow-brown in colour and underlies diagnostic topsoil or an E horizon. It is high-potential soil.
Red Structured B Horizon
This horizon has red colours, a relatively strong structure and underlies an orthic B horizon. It is a high-potential soil, occurring mainly in low rainfall areas and responds to irrigation.
Neocutanic B Borizon
This horizon occurs in unconsolidated colluvium, underlies diagnostic topsoil or an E horizon and contains non-uniform colours, caused by cutans (clay skins). It is usually deep soil, suitable for irrigation.
Neocarbonate B Horizon
This horizon occurs in unconsolidated material, underlies diagnostic topsoil or an E horizon and contains enough calcium magnesium carbonate to effervesce when treated with hydrochloric acid. It is a suitable arable soil.
E Horizon
This horizon underlies an A horizon. It is grey or mottled in colour because of leaching due to the impervious nature of the underlying subsoil, causing water to build up and move sideways. It is highly susceptible to erosion.
G Horizon
This horizon underlies a vertic, melanic or orthic A or E horizon. It is saturated with water for long periods. It is often used for winter pastures but is susceptible to erosion if exposed.
Soft Plinthic B Horizon
This horizon has a mottled matrix with concretions and occurs second or third in the sequence of a diagnostic horizon, provided that when it is third, the second horizon is an E, red apedal B or a yellow-brown apedal B horizon. When it underlies yellow-brown soil, it acts as a water reservoir.
Hard Plinthic B Horizon
This horizon consists of mottled concretions that cannot be cut with a spade. It occurs beneath an orthic A, E, or yellow-brown apedal B horizon. It has low cropping potential.
Unspecified Wet Material
This horizon underlies red apedal, yellow-brown apedal, neocutanic or neocarbonate B horizons. It varies from grey unconsolidated soil to partly weathered rock.
Prismacutanic B Horizon
This horizon has a prismatic or columnar structure and an abrupt transition with an overlying orthic A or E horizon. It is only suitable for natural grazing.
Pedocutanic B Horizon
This horizon has an angular blocky structure, underlying a diagnostic topsoil horizon or an E horizon. It should be used for natural grazing or pastures.
Lithocutanic B Horizon
This horizon has a cutanic character expressed usually as tongues merging into the underlying rock. It underlies a diagnostic topsoil horizon or an E horizon. It has a deep topsoil and is suitable for cropping.
Hard Rock
This is a continuous hard layer of rock and occurs beneath a diagnostic melanic or an orthic A horizon.
Stratified Alluvium
This is unconsolidated material, contains stratifications caused by alluvial or colluvial deposits and underlies an orthic A or melanic A horizon or occurs at the surface. It is suitable for irrigation.
Regic Sand
This is a recent sand deposit, usually Aeolian, which shows little pedogenesis, and directly underlies an orthic A horizon.
Man-Made Soil Deposit
This is a man-made deposit of soil material and occurs beneath an orthic A horizon or at the surface.
Saprolite
This is a horizon of weathering rock underlying a pedocutanic B horizon. It is non-arable and best left as grazing.
Unconsolidated material without signs of wetness
This underlies a pedocutanic B horizon and is not suitable for cultivation. It is best left for natural grazing.
Unconsolidated material with signs of wetness
This underlies a pedocutanic B horizon and is non-arable.
General assessment of some selected soil forms
There are 73 different soil forms in South Africa, derived from 30 soil horizons. Soil ranking, according to decreasing potential and increasing hazards, is shown below.