New Jersey's land-grant extension doesn't use a one-size-fits-all number — it uses a published method. Rutgers uses classical Adams-Evans. 8 inch depth, lb CCE/A units. Enter your soil-test values in the free calculator and Zone Forge returns tons of CaCO₃-equivalent per acre, ECCE-adjusted, with the citation.
Published source: Coastal Plain Adams-Evans (UDel anchor)
It depends on your soil's buffer/acidity reading and your target pH — New Jersey publishes a method, not a single number. Rutgers uses classical Adams-Evans. 8 inch depth, lb CCE/A units. Enter your values in the free Zone Forge lime calculator for tons of CaCO3-equivalent per acre, with the citation.
Rutgers uses classical Adams-Evans. 8 inch depth, lb CCE/A units. Source: Coastal Plain Adams-Evans (UDel anchor).
Zone Forge computes every New Jersey recommendation from that state's own published land-grant method — lime, soil-test fertilizer, and full variable-rate prescriptions. See the science →