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et al., 2013). Elsewhere in the red hills of Dundee Jory, Ultisols are
                                                                            developed on middle Miocene Grande Ronde basalt without the
                                                                            bauxitic paleosol (Otte et al., 1974).

                                                                              Other wine-producing soils of middle Pleistocene terraces that
                                                                            cut into marine sediments are Bellpine Ultisols and Willakenzie
                                                                            Alfisols, developed on volcaniclastic siltstone and sandstone, such
                                                                            as the Spencer Formation (Otte et al., 1974; Patching et al., 1987;
                                                                            Fillmore et al., 2009). These Alfisols are more nutrient-rich and
                                                                            less acidic than Ultisols, but both have the lowest pH near the base
                                                                            of thick clayey (Bt) horizons. In contrast, soils formed from
                                                                            Missoula Flood deposits and loess are less acidic and more fertile
                                                                            Mollisols of the Woodburn, Hazelair, and Chehulpum Series
                                                                            (Otte et al., 1974; Gerig et al., 1985). The 16 distinct soil series and
                                                                            variants of this study are detailed in the GSA Supplemental Data
                                                                            Repository1 and provide an array of substrates for wines.

                                                                              The Willamette Valley is a cool and humid climate viticultural
                                                                            district well suited for Pinot Noir grapes (Jones et al., 2012).
                                                                            Irrigation is not necessary in such climates, and vine vigor is
                                                                            limited by low soil nutrients (Burns, 2012).

Figure 1. Simplified geological map of the Willamette Valley, Oregon, USA,  METHODS                                                                          GSA TODAY | www.geosociety.org/gsatoday
with distribution of vineyards (modified from Moore, 2002; with bauxite
occurrences from Libbey et al., 1945).                                        Our choice of Pinot Noir wines from the Willamette Valley for
                                                                            this study was due to long experience with local vintners and soils,
these Ultisols are developed on Oxisol paleosol remnants between            and particularly, the “great debate” about differences in the taste
flows of the Columbia Basalt Group (Libbey et al., 1945; Liu et al.,        of wines from Jory versus Willakenzie soils (Burns, 2012). To
2013) dated at 15.7 Ma (Martin et al., 2013). Elsewhere the Oxisol          supplement such small-scale studies, we compiled all available
bauxites below the Jory clay loam are 18 m thick (Fig. 2). Such             metadata from the Web pages of all 177 wineries of the Willamette
Oxisol paleosols required mean annual temperatures of at least              Valley Wineries Association, whose technical sheets give wine and
17 °C and mean annual precipitation of at least 1100 mm during              grape pH and total acidity, grape sugar content, wine alcohol
the middle Miocene (Retallack, 2008, 2010). In contrast, from               content, harvest dates, recommended price, and vineyard location.
1971–2000, Salem had a mean annual temperature of 11.4 °C and               Sugar content in weight percent is given by the wine industry term
a mean annual precipitation of 1016 mm (National Oceanographic              “Brix,” and all these commercial data were obtained using twenty-
and Atmospheric Administration, 2015), so that Ultisols are the             first-century equipment and industrial standards. By experi-
most deeply weathered soils forming in Oregon today (Lindeburg              mental design, as many factors as possible were kept constant:
                                                                            data were limited to a single grape variety (Pinot Noir), a single
                                                                            vinicultural area (Willamette Valley), and grouped by vintage (to
                                                                            equalize climate effects). Blended wines were excluded, and
                                                                            single-vineyard single-clone wines were located using Google
                                                                            Earth and then checked in county soil surveys (Williams et al.,
                                                                            1972; Otte et al., 1974; Knezevich et al., 1975, 1982; Green et al.,
                                                                            1982; Gerig et al., 1985; Patching et al., 1987; Fillmore et al., 2009).
                                                                            These same soil surveys were the source of soil data, which
                                                                            included both maximum and minimum soil pH (determined by
                                                                            pH meter on 1:1 soil:water), cation exchange capacity (by ammo-
                                                                            nium acetate displacement of Ca2+, Mg2+, K+, Na+), depth to base
                                                                            of clay-enriched (Bt) horizon, and clay and organic matter content
                                                                            (both weight percent) in representative profiles for each county
                                                                            survey. Geological data are from Walker and McLeod (1991).
                                                                            Some wines were excluded because there were multiple soil series
                                                                            in a single vineyard area when checked with county soil surveys.
                                                                            Vintners vary in the extent of data recorded, and few vintners
                                                                            posted archival data back to 1999. In the final database of 267 wines,
                                                                            only the 2008, 2009, 2010, and 2011 vintages had 20 or more
                                                                            wines (see the GSA Data Repository Supplemental [footnote 1]).
                                                                            Uncontrolled in these data were details of viticulture other

1 GSA Supplemental Data Item 2016052, compiled data on wines and soils with graphs of additional vintages, is online at www.geosociety.org/pubs/ft2016.htm.
You can also request a copy from GSA Today, P.O. Box 9140, Boulder, CO 80301-9140, USA; gsatoday@geosociety.org.

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