Soil heat capacity rho c and thermal conductivity lambda determine how a soil warms or cools with exchanges of energy by conduction, convection, and radiation, Both rho c and lambda depend on water content theta. The ability to monitor soil rho c, lambda, and theta is an important tool in managing the soil temperature regime to affect seed germination and crop growth,We developed a time domain reflectometry (TDR) probe whose electrodes enclosed thermocouple junctions and a heater, The probe served as a dual-probe heat-pulse device to estimate rho c and lambda and as a three-electrode-type TDR probe for theta, The probe was tested under laboratory conditions in loamy sand at theta s from 0.005 (air dry) to 0.36 m(3) m(-3), First, a TDR trace was recorded from a probe, then power was applied to a heater in the center electrode and temperature in an outer electrode 10 mm from the heater was recorded, Recorded TDR traces and temperatures were analyzed to estimate theta, rho c, and lambda. Water contents estimated by TDR agreed well with gravimetrically determined values, Measured rho c and lambda agreed with models proposed by De Vries, but there was considerable difference between measured and modeled values at high water contents, Water contents estimated from rho c showed more variability than those estimated from TDR when compared with gravimetrically determined values.