Description: This soil layer is supplied and collected by the Ohio Cooperative Soil Survey and should be used for general farm, local, and regional planning. Onsite investigations are needed in some cases for certain conservation and engineering applications. The information represents the most dominant soil in the soil mapping unit or units that consist of one too many different soils. The Soils information provided is a snapshot (January 15, 2014) of the Natural Resources Conservation Services 2014 Soil Survey Geographic (SSURGO) Data Base and and will be updated annually. The soil map unit polygons were digitized at a scale of 1:24000.The information provided through the Ohio Department of Natural Resources is of the Ohio extent and contains the most requested map unit information. The information was joined to the map unit feature class in an attempt to make the soil feature class easier to use for the majority of Ohio's users. For access to the full database with 100s of attributes go to http://websoilsurvey.nrcs.usda.gov/.The attributes included with the soils layer are for the Dominant condition in a map unit and are as follows:Attribute = Alias/MeaningMUSYM = Map Unit SymbolMUKEY = Mapunit Keymuname = Mapunit Namefarmlndcl = Farm Class (Prime)slopegraddcp = Slope Gradient brockdepmin = Bedrock Depth - Minimumwtdepannmin = Water - Table Depth - Annual - Minimumflodfreqprs = Flooding Frequency pondfreqprs = Ponding Frequency - Presencedrclassdcd = Drainage Class - hydgrpdcd = Hydrologic Group hydclprs = Hydric Classification - PresenceTo access or download the whole SSURGO database go to http://websoilsurvey.nrcs.usda.gov/
Copyright Text: USDA-Produced by the Ohio Cooperative Soil Survey and is a part of the Soil Survey Geographic (gSSURGO) Database which is maintained and created by the USDA- Natural Resources Conservation Service. Aaron Lantz with the Ohio Department of Natural Resources Joined attributes from the gSSURGO Database to the soil mapunit (polygon) lsyer.
Description: This 10m raster dataset was supplied and collected by the Ohio Cooperative Soil Survey and should be used for general farm, local, and regional planning. Onsite investigations are needed in some cases for certain conservation and engineering applications. The information represents the most dominant soil in the soil mapping unit or units that consist of one too many different soils. This 10m raster dataset is provided for the purpose of making the Highly Erodible Land Classification available. The HEL Classification was removed from the official SSURGO Database in 2011.The Soils information provided is a snapshot of the 2010 Natural Resources Conservation Services Soil Survey Geographic (SSURGO) Data Base . The soil map unit polygons were digitized at a scale of 1:24000.The information is provided through the Ohio Department of Natural Resources, is of the Ohio extent and contains the Highly Erodible Land (HEL) attributes. The information was joined to the map unit feature class in an attempt to make the HEL information more accessible for the majority of Ohio's users. For access to the full database with 100s of attributes go to http://websoilsurvey.nrcs.usda.gov/.The attributes included with the soils layer are for the Dominant condition in a map unit and are as follows:Attribute = Alias/Meaningmuhelcl = Highly Erodible Land ClassificationMUKEY = Mapunit KeyTo access or download the whole SSURGO database go to http://websoilsurvey.nrcs.usda.gov/
Copyright Text: USDA-Produced by the Ohio Cooperative Soil Survey and the information is a part of the Soil Survey Geographic (gSSURGO) Database which is maintained and created by the USDA- Natural Resources Conservation Service. Aaron Lantz with the Ohio Department of Natural Resources Joined the HEL classification attribute from the 2010 SSURGO Database to the 2010 soil Raster (Grided) layer.
Description: This 10m raster was supplied and collected by the Ohio Cooperative Soil Survey and should be used for general farm, local, and regional planning. Onsite investigations are needed in some cases for certain conservation and engineering applications. The information represents the most dominant soil in the soil mapping unit or units that consist of one too many different soils. The Soils information provided is a snapshot (January 15, 2014) of the Natural Resources Conservation Services 2014 Soil Survey Geographic (SSURGO) Data Base and will be updated annually. The soil map unit polygons were digitized at a scale of 1:24000.The information is provided through the Ohio Department of Natural Resources, is of the Ohio extent and contains the most requested map unit information. The information was joined to the map unit feature class in an attempt to make the soil feature class easier to use . For access to the full database with 100s of attributes go to http://websoilsurvey.nrcs.usda.gov/.The attributes included with the soils layer are for the Dominant condition in a map unit and are as follows:Attribute = Alias/MeaningMUSYM = Map Unit SymbolMUKEY = Mapunit Keymuname = Mapunit Namefarmlndcl = Farm Class (Prime)slopegraddcp = Slope Gradient brockdepmin = Bedrock Depth - Minimumwtdepannmin = Water - Table Depth - Annual - Minimumflodfreqprs = Flooding Frequency pondfreqprs = Ponding Frequency - Presencedrclassdcd = Drainage Class - hydgrpdcd = Hydrologic Group hydclprs = Hydric Classification - PresenceTo access or download the whole SSURGO database go to http://websoilsurvey.nrcs.usda.gov/
Copyright Text: USDA-Produced by the Ohio Cooperative Soil Survey and the information is a part of the Soil Survey Geographic (gSSURGO) Database which is maintained by the USDA- Natural Resources Conservation Service and data from the Ohio Cooperative Soil Survey. Aaron Lantz with the Ohio Department of Natural Resources Joined attributes from the SSURGO Database to the soil raster (Grided) layer.