(USGS)

Geology and Ground-Water Resources of the Lawrenceville Area, Georgia

Melinda J. Chapman, Thomas J. Crawford, and W. Todd Tharpe

U.S. Geological Survey Water-Resources Investigations Report 98-4233, 46 pages and 2 plates

Photo of core sequence Photo of rock outcrop
Cover illustrations: Left--amphibolite saprolite present at land surface (geologic hammer shown for scale only
Right--amphibolite subsurface bedrock core

ABSTRACT

The population of the Atlanta Metropolitan area continues to grow at a rapid pace and the demand for water supplies steadily increases. Exploration for ground-water resources, as a supplement to surface-water supplies, is being undertaken by many city and county governments. The application of effective investigative methods to characterization of the complex igneous and metamorphic fractured bedrock aquifers of the Piedmont physiographic province is essential to the success of these ground-water exploration programs. The U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the City of Lawrenceville, Ga., began a study in December 1994 to apply various investigative techniques for field characterization of fractured crystalline-bedrock aquifers near Lawrenceville.

Five major lithologic units were mapped in the Lawrenceville, Ga., area as part of an ongoing study of ground-water resources-amphibolite, biotite gneiss, button schist, granite gneiss, and quartzite/aluminous schist. These units generally are thin in outcrop width, have low angles of dip (nearly 0 to 20 degrees, dip reversals occur over short distances), and exhibit some shearing characteristics. The most productive unit for ground-water resources, on the basis of subsurface data collected through 1997, is the amphibolite. Historically, two wells drilled into this unit are recognized as having possibly the highest yields in the Piedmont region of northern Georgia. The City of Lawrenceville refurbished one well at the Rhodes Jordan Wellfield in 1990, and has pumped this well at an average rate of about 230 gallons per minute since 1995. In general, the composition of water collected from the bedrock wells, regolith wells, and City Lake is similar; calcium and bicarbonate are the dominant cation and anion, respectively. Water from the regolith wells and the lake have lower concentrations of major ions than does water from the bedrock wells. Many of the ground-water samples collected from the Rhodes Jordan Wellfield during October-November 1995, and from the wellfield and three additional observation well sites during August 1996, contain volatile organic compounds. Volatile organic compounds were detected in ground-water samples collected from several bedrock and regolith wells located in urban areas. Trace concentrations of tetrachloroethylene, trichloroethylene, 1,1-dichloroethane, trichlorofluoromethane, 1,1,1-trichloroethane, and cis-1,2-dichloroethene were detected. Methyl-tert-butyl ether (MTBE)-a compound used to increase the octane level in gasoline-was detected at concentrations above expected urban background levels in bedrock wells in the Rhodes Jordan Wellfield. Concentrations of MTBE ranged from 0.6 to 12 micrograms per liter in October-November 1995, and from 0.6 to 26 micrograms per liter in August 1996.

Continuous ground-water-level data suggest that the fractured crystalline-bedrock aquifer (amphibolite unit) at the Rhodes Jordan Wellfield, generally is dewatered to a depth near a productive fracture during the regular pumping cycle of 18 hours per day, 5 days on and 2 days off per week. However, when the stress on the aquifer is increased by extending the pumping period up to as much as 18 days, or by pumping longer that 18 hours per day, the aquifer exhibits an unusual condition of recovery. Areal effects of pumping have been observed at distances of as much as one mile, extending across surface-water drainage divides.


TABLE OF CONTENTS

Abstract

Introduction

Background

Purpose and scope

Description of the study area

Methods of investigation

Previous studies

Well and surface-water station numbering systems

Acknowledgments

Regional geology

Geologic mappingÑinterpretations and limitations

Lithologic units

Amphibolite

Biotite gneiss

Button schist

Granite gneiss

Magnetite quartzite

Quartzite and aluminous schist

Diabase dikes

Hydrogeologic sections

Ground-water resources

Well inventory and data compilation

City of Lawrenceville historical well records

Well yields

Relation of well yield to lithology

Amphibolite

Biotite gneiss

Button schist

Granite gneiss

Quartzite and aluminous schist

Interpretation of borehole geophysical logs

Rhodes Jordan Wellfield

Maltbie Street well

Pike Street well

Gwinnett County Airport well

Analyses of ground-water levels

Response of local ground-water levels to pumpage

Areal effects of ground-water withdrawals

Ground-water quality

Summary and conclusions

References cited

 

Plate 1. Lithologic map showing the distribution of major rock types, fault contacts, and well locations in the Lawrenceville area, Georgia

Plate 2. Hydrogeologic sections showing general dip of lithologic units inferred from surface geologic mapping and subsurface lithologic and fracture data collected from wells in the Lawrenceville area, Georgia


The full report is available in pdf format in three files: Water-Resources Investigations Report 98-4233 (text and page-sized illustrations, 2.3 MB), Plate 1 (2.75 MB), and Plate 2 (96 kb). Note that Plates 1 and 2 are each 22 inches by 36 inches.
To view these documents, you need the Adobe Acrobat® Reader installed on your computer. (A free copy of the Acrobat® Reader may be downloaded from Adobe Systems Incorporated.)


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