Present-day oxisols are found almost exclusively in tropical areas, in
South America and
Africa, almost always on highly stable continental
cratons. In
Southeast Asia, oxisols are found on remnants of the
Cimmerian microcontinent, and on the
Shan–Thai terrane. In
Thailand, rhodic ferralsols, called
Yasothon soils, are said to have formed under humid tropical conditions in the early
Tertiary, on an extensive plain later uplifted to form the
Khorat Plateau. Characterized by a bright red color, these
relict soils occur on uplands in a great semicircle around the southern rim, overlying associated
gravel horizons said to have been cleared of
sand by
termites, in a prolonged and still on-going process of
bioturbation. Xanthic ferralsols of the
Khorat and
Udon series, characterized by a pale yellow to brown color, developed in midlands in processes still under investigation; as are those forming lowland soils resembling European
brown soils. In
Australia vast areas formerly covered in rainforest have become so dry that oxisols have formed a hard
ironstone cover upon which only
skeletal soils can form. ==Genesis==