Clay-illuvial soils with argic horizon and developed from loess or other silty deposits constitute
high-quality arable land owing to favourable physical and chemical properties. There are thus
numerous reports on such soils, considering their structure, compaction, erosion, water and air
properties. However, there is still a lack of quantitative studies on structure and physical prop-
erties on analogous soils under forests. The aim of this research was therefore a comprehensive
description of the physical state, including structure, water and air properties, of a forest Retisol
developed from loess. Morphographic, morphological and morphometric parameters of structure,
selected physicochemical and water and air properties and also relationships among the obtained
parameters were analysed for genetic horizons O, Ah, AE, E, Bt/E, Bt, BtC and C. The field survey and
soil structure images indicated that the studied forest soil had an undisturbed sequence of genetic
horizons. The soil structure was shaped by soil flora and fauna causing bioturbation. Qualitative
and quantitative structure analysis revealed that the O horizon had a loose arrangement, the Ah ho-
rizon had an aggregate crumb structure, the AE horizon had zones of an aggregate crumb structure
and non-aggregate structure (fissured or with channels), while the remaining mineral horizons
showed essentially a non-aggregate structure with varying proportions and sizes of planes and
biogenic pores (i.e. cracked or fissured structure and structure with channels, respectively). The
morphometric and physicochemical parameters facilitated a detailed analysis of the Retisol’s physi-
cal state. The Retisol’s structure type and degree of aggregate development directly influenced its
hydraulic conductivity and water retention capacity. Therefore, under simulated precipitation, the
soil water content and effective saturation varied mainly in the topsoil (O–E horizons) and virtually
no changes were observed in the subsoil (Bt–C horizons). The research resulted in a comprehensive
analysis of the physicochemical and morphometric parameters, their relationships, and structure
images that were previously unavailable in other studies, covering the physical state of the entire
pedon of a forest Retisol. The results obtained may serve, for example, as a reference (control) for
analogous soils located in non-forest ecosystems and become an element in space-for-time substitu-
tion scenarios aimed at assessing the intensity of anthropogenic transformation.