πŸ“Œ Soil Basics
πŸ”¬ Key Definitions
  • Soil Horizon β€” Layer parallel to surface of soil; different physical, chemical & biological characteristics
  • Weathering process helps in soil formation
  • Science of studying soil: Soil Science (Pedology)
  • ICAR: Indian Council of Agricultural Research β€” HQ: New Delhi
  • ICAR divides Indian soil into 8 categories
🚨 Common Indian Soil Deficiencies
All Indian soils commonly lack: Nitrogen, Phosphorus, and Humus
πŸ“Š 8 Soil Types β€” Area Coverage
45.6%
1. Alluvial Soil
18.67%
3. Red Soil
16.61%
2. Black Soil
3.7%
4. Laterite Soil
⚑ AREA ORDER (Highest β†’ Lowest)
Alluvial (45.6%) β†’ Red (18.67%) β†’ Black (16.61%) β†’ Laterite (3.7%)
πŸ›οΈ Important Soil Institutions
Institution Established Purpose
Central Soil Conservation Board 1953 Control soil erosion and harmful effects
Soil Survey 1956 Scientific survey of soils
CAZRI (Central Arid Zone Research Institute) 1959 β€” Jodhpur Study for resolving desert problems
🚨 EXAM TRAP
🟀 1. Alluvial Soil β€” Most Widespread
Alluvial Soil β€” 45.6% of India
  • Area: 45.6% of the country β€” most widespread
  • Formation: Brought by rivers β€” extremely fertile
  • Found in: UP, Bihar, West Bengal, Punjab
  • Northern Plains + Delta of peninsular rivers
  • Entire Northern Plain + Coastal Plains
ABUNDANCE:
PotashLime
DEFICIENCY:
NitrogenPhosphorusHumus
Major Crops:
Rice
Wheat
Maize
Oilseeds
Pulses
Potato
πŸ”„ Bangar vs Khadar β€” Types of Alluvial
Feature Bangar (Old) Khadar (New)
Age Old alluvial New alluvial
Fertility Less fertile Extremely fertile
Position Elevated (upland) Low-lying flood plain
Texture Coarse, Kankar (gravel) Fine silt
⚫ 2. Black Soil (Regur) β€” Cotton Soil
Black Soil (Regur) β€” 16.61% of India
  • Area: 16.61%
  • Other name: Regur Soil
  • Formation: Weathering of Lava (Basalt)
  • Water retention: Highest among all soils
  • Becomes sticky when wet; cracks appear when dry
  • Called self-ploughing soil (due to cracks)
  • Best for: Cotton cultivation β€” "Black Cotton Soil"
ABUNDANCE:
IronLimeAluminiumMagnesium
DEFICIENCY:
PhosphorusNitrogen
Found In:
Gujarat
Maharashtra
W. Madhya Pradesh
Deccan Plateau
Other Crops:
Cotton β˜…
Wheat
Jowar
Sugarcane
🚨 EXAM TRAP
πŸ”΄ 3. Red Soil β€” 2nd Largest Area
Red Soil β€” 18.67% of India
  • Area: 18.67% β€” 2nd largest
  • Formation: Disintegration of igneous & metamorphic rocks
  • Red colour due to: Iron oxide
  • Appears yellow when hydrated
  • Nature: Acidic
  • Found in: water-scarce areas
  • Belongs to: Omnibus soil group
ABUNDANCE:
SilicaIron
DEFICIENCY:
NitrogenPhosphorusHumus
Found In:
Karnataka
Tamil Nadu
Maharashtra
W. Ghats region
Major Crops:
Cotton
Wheat
Pulses
Coarse Grains
🟫 4. Laterite Soil β€” Leached Soil
Laterite Soil β€” 3.7% of India
  • Area: 3.7%
  • Formation: Leaching process from heavy rainfall (High temp + High rainfall)
  • Found in: Tropical regions, developed on igneous base rocks
  • Colour: Red
ABUNDANCE:
IronSilicaAluminium
DEFICIENCY:
NitrogenPotashLimeOrganic Matter
Types of Laterite:
Type Feature
Deep Red Laterite Deficient in Potash β†’ Poor fertility
White Laterite Least fertile; White = Kaolinite (Clay mineral)
Underground Climatic Laterite Less fertile; Iron oxide leaches underground in rainy season
Found In:
Tamil Nadu
Andhra Pradesh
Kerala
Assam
Meghalaya Hills
Major Crops:
Tea β˜…
Rubber
Cashew
🚨 EXAM TRAP
🏜️ Remaining 4 Soil Types
5. Marshy / Peaty Soil
  • Found in: Coastal regions
  • Condition: Heavy rainfall + High humidity
  • Abundance: Organic matter (Humus)
6. Desert Soil
  • Found in: areas with <50 cm rainfall
  • States: W. Rajasthan, Gujarat, Haryana
  • Abundance: Salts, Phosphorus
  • Deficiency: Microorganisms, Nitrogen
7. Saline / Alkaline Soil
  • Found in: AP, Karnataka, Bihar, UP, Haryana, Punjab, RJ, MH, Gujarat
  • Abundance: Sodium, Magnesium, Potassium
  • Deficiency: Nitrogen
  • Dry type: Sandy + Saline β†’ Rajasthan, Punjab, Gujarat
8. Mountain / Forest Soil
  • Found in: Mountain / Forest regions
  • Abundance: Humus
  • Deficiency: Potash, Lime
πŸ”‘ Special Features β€” Quick Reference
Unique Feature Soil Type
Highest water retention Black Soil (Regur)
Self-ploughing (cracks when dry) Black Soil
Most widespread (45.6%) Alluvial Soil
Formed by leaching Laterite Soil
Formed by lava weathering Black Soil
Red colour due to iron oxide Red Soil
Turns yellow when hydrated Red Soil
Acidic nature Red Soil
Best for cotton Black Soil
Best for tea/rubber/cashew Laterite Soil
Omnibus soil group Red Soil
White = Kaolinite (least fertile) White Laterite
Richest in Humus Marshy/Peaty Soil
🚨 EXAM TRAP
πŸ“Š Master Summary β€” All 8 Soil Types
# Soil Type % Area Formation Abundance Deficiency Major Crops Found In
1 Alluvial 45.6% River deposits Potash, Lime N, P, Humus Rice, Wheat, Maize, Pulses, Potato UP, Bihar, WB, Punjab, N.Plains, Coasts
2 Black (Regur) 16.61% Lava (Basalt) weathering Fe, Lime, Al, Mg P, N Cottonβ˜…, Wheat, Jowar, Sugarcane Gujarat, MH, W.MP, Deccan
3 Red 18.67% Igneous/Metamorphic rock disintegration Silica, Iron N, P, Humus Cotton, Wheat, Pulses, Coarse grains Karnataka, TN, MH, W.Ghats
4 Laterite 3.7% Leaching (high temp + rain) Fe, Silica, Al N, K, Lime, OM Teaβ˜…, Rubber, Cashew TN, AP, Kerala, Assam, Meghalaya
5 Marshy/Peaty β€” Heavy rain + high humidity Organic matter β€” Coastal crops Coastal regions
6 Desert β€” Arid conditions (<50cm rain) Salts, Phosphorus Microorg., N β€” W.Rajasthan, Gujarat, Haryana
7 Saline/Alkaline β€” β€” Na, Mg, K Nitrogen β€” AP, KA, Bihar, UP, HR, PB, RJ, MH, GJ
8 Mountain/Forest β€” β€” Humus Potash, Lime β€” Mountain/Forest regions
🎯 Crop–Soil Mapping
Crop Best Soil
Cotton Black Soil (Regur) β€” primary | Red soil β€” secondary
Rice, Wheat, Maize Alluvial Soil
Tea, Rubber, Cashew Laterite Soil
Jowar, Sugarcane Black Soil
Pulses Alluvial + Red Soil
Potato Alluvial Soil
⚑ MASTER RECALL β€” Deficiency Pattern
πŸ“ Bihar Special β€” Soil for BPSC
🌾 Bihar = Alluvial Soil State
  • Bihar is covered predominantly by Alluvial Soil
  • Deposited by rivers: Ganga, Kosi, Gandak, Son, Ghagara
  • Bihar's northern plains = Khadar (new alluvial) β€” extremely fertile
  • Bihar's upland areas = Bangar (old alluvial) β€” less fertile
  • Bihar's alluvial soil supports: Rice, Wheat, Maize, Potato, Pulses
Rice
Kharif Season
Wheat
Rabi Season
Maize
Both Seasons
⚠️ Saline Soil in Bihar
  • Bihar also has Saline/Alkaline soil in some areas
  • Locally called "Usar" soil in UP-Bihar region
  • Abundance: Sodium, Magnesium, Potassium
  • Deficiency: Nitrogen
  • Problem for agriculture β€” needs soil reclamation
πŸ”οΈ Chotanagpur Plateau β€” Red Soil (Jharkhand Border)
  • Chotanagpur Plateau (Jharkhand) = Red Soil area
  • Formed from: Igneous + Metamorphic rocks
  • Near Bihar's Jharkhand border area
  • Less fertile but supports: Coarse grains, Pulses
🌿 Key Bihar Alluvial Soil Facts
  • Alluvial soil = Potash + Lime abundant (good for Rabi crops)
  • Deficient in: Nitrogen, Phosphorus, Humus β€” farmers need fertilizers
  • Kosi floods deposit new Khadar soil (fertile but floods are destructive)
  • Son River valley = fertile alluvial + some red soil mix
  • Bihar = rice bowl of Eastern India due to alluvial soil
⚑ BPSC MASTER RECALL β€” Bihar Soils
🚨 BPSC EXAM TRAP
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