332 FLORIDA GEOLOGICAL SURVEY-SEVENTH ANNUAL REPORT. 
texture and topographic position. It is a flatwoods soil and usually 
underlain by a brown hardpan layer. It is of low agricultural value. 
The rolling phase is very droughty and has no agricultural value. 
The characteristic timber growth is spruce pine, which is not found 
on any of the other soils of the county. 
The Plummer fine sand is an unimportant type occurring only 
in the northeastern part of the county. It is poorly drained and best 
suited for pasture land. 
The Park wood soils, consisting of a fine sandy loam and a silty 
clay loam, are not extensively developed. They occupy low, natur¬ 
ally wet country, but constitute the strongest soils of the county. 
The Fellowship fine sandy loam is low lying, and under present 
conditions not suited for the growing of any crop. With drainage 
this soil should prove highly productive. 
Up to the present time Muck has not been extensively placed 
under cultivation. If drained, it would be adapted to Irish pota¬ 
toes, celery, strawberries, and other truck crops. 
Coastal beach has no agricultural value. The keys or islands 
form the largest development of this type. 
Tidal marsh represents lowlands along the coast and streams sub¬ 
ject to tidal overflow. Many of these areas could be diked and 
drained and converted into valuable farm lands. 
There is a large acreage of undeveloped land in the county, 
some of which is adapted to the production of citrus fruits and some 
to the growing of truck. Either of these lines may be profitably 
extended. 
