Estimation of ground-water discharge to streams in the central Savannah River
basin of Georgia and South Carolina
J.B. Atkins, Celeste A. Journey, and John S. Clarke
U.S. Geological Survey Water-Resources Investigations
Report 96-4179, 36 p.
ABSTRACT
Ground-water discharge to streams was estimated in the central
Savannah River basin near the U.S. Department of Energy, Savannah
River Site, and adjacent parts of Georgia and South Carolina using
hydrograph-separation techniques and a drought streamflow
analysis. The estimated mean-annual ground- water discharge determined
from the hydrograph-separation method indicates a greater ground-water
contribution to streamflow for Upper Three Runs than for Butler,
Brushy, or Brier Creeks. The unit-area mean-annual ground-water
discharge ranges from 1.06 to 1.15 cubic feet per second per square
mile for the Upper Three Runs basin; and from 0.39 to 0.69 cubic feet
per second per square mile for the Butler, Brushy, and Brier Creek
basins. The higher unit-area mean-annual discharges in the Upper Three
Runs basin implies greater ground-water contribution from underlying
Coastal Plain aquifers in that area.
A drought-period stream discharge analysis indicates that streamflow
in the Upper Three Runs basin, S.C., receives a greater contribution
of ground-water discharge from the intermediate ground-water flow
system than the Georgia streams. During the 1986 drought, Butler,
Brushy, and Brier Creeks had unit-area ground-water discharges that
ranged from 0.004 to 0.16 cubic feet per second per square mile; and
Upper Three Runs had unit-area ground-water discharges that ranged
from 0.43 to 0.77 cubic feet per second per square mile. The drought
stream discharge (estimated minimum ground-water discharge) was 16 to
23 percent of the estimated mean-annual ground-water discharge for the
Brier Creek basin, and 41 to 67 percent for the Upper Three Runs
basin.
Contribution of ground-water discharge to the tributaries is
considered to be mainly from local and intermediate flow systems. The
ground-water contribution from the local flow system in the Upper
Three Runs basin ranged from 72 percent of the total ground-water
discharge in the upper two-thirds of the basin to 100 percent in the
lower part of the basin. Discharge from the local flow system in the
Brier Creek basin ranged from 78 percent of the total ground-water
discharge in the upper part of the basin to 95 percent of the total
ground-water discharge in the central part of the basin.
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