IC23 GEORGIA STATE DIVISION OF CONSERVATION DEPARTMENT OF MINES, MINING AND GEOLOGY GARLAND PEYTON, Director THE GEOLOGICAL SURVEY Information Circular 2 3 INTERIM REPORT ON TEST DRILLING AND WATER SAMPLING IN THE BRUNSWICK AREA, GLYNN COUNTY GEORGIA by Robert L. Wait United States Geological Survey ......... t:a / ~~,~~ ~:~ ' D -;;; Prepared cooperatively by the Geological Survey, United States Department of the Interior, Washington, D. C. ATLANTA 1962 IC 23 GEORGIA STATE DIVISION OF CONSERVATION DEPARTMENT OF MINES, MINING AND GEOLOGY GARLAND PEYTON, Director THE GEOLOGICAL SURVEY Information Circular 2 3 INTERIM REPORT ON TEST DRILLING AND WATER SAMPLING IN THE BRUNSWICK AREA, GLYNN COUNTY GEORGIA by Robert L. Wait United States Geological Survey Prepared cooperatively by the Geological Survey, United States Department of the Interior, Washington, D. C. ATLANTA 1962 Prepared in cooperation with the city of' Brunswick and Glynn County CONTEifl'S Page Abstract .................................................................. 1 Introduction ............................................................. 2 Purpose and scope 2 Location of area 3 Previous investigations 4 Acknowledglnents ... , , 4 Well-numbering system 5 Geolog:y 5 Test Drilling 10 Ground water . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , 12 Piezometrio &Ul'face . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 Predicted d.rawdown.s . . . . . . . . 15 Change in head and flow with depth 19 Current -meter tests . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 Quality of water ....................... ~. 23 Test well l . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23 Test well 2 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23 Brunswick Pulp and Paper Co. well 10 . 29 .Areal water sam.pling ............. , . . . . . 31 City of Brunswick F Street well . . . . 37 Conclusions ................ , 42 Beterenoes cited . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45 1 ILLUSTRATIONS Page Figure 1. Index map showing, Br'Unswick, Glynil County .......................................... 3 2. Generalized geologic section of Glynn County, Ga. I as determined from test well 2, and water- bearing properties of rocks . 8 .3. Gariuiui-ray 'log. section. along Bruilswick. Peninsula~ showing. displacement of c6rrelative points ~ 9 4. Piezometric surf~c~, ,Glynn CountY,, Ga., I>ecember 1990 ................. ~ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 5 Theoretical distance-drawdown graph for the Bruns'W:l ck area . . . 16 6. Prof~le. of piezometric surface, 1960, and predicted profi~es for 30 mgd additional pumpage at end of Ot;J.e y~ar . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 j. Head and flow from test well 2 20 8. Current-meter traverse of test well 2, 'W:lth well .shut in . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 9 Chloride content and hardness of water from test well 2. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Z7 ii ILLUSTRATIONS Page Figure lO. Chloride content and hardness of water :from Brunswick Pulp and Paper Co. well lO . 30 ll. Chloride content of water in city of Brunswick, GEL. , 1.96o-61 ......... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... . . . . . 32 l2. Chloride content of 3 wells at Hercules Powder Co. 38 l3. Change in chloride content with time, in c1ty of Brunswick F Street well and Hercules .Powder Co. well H ... 4-1 11i Page Table 1. Chemical anal.yses of uncontaminated ground water from principal artesian aquifer, Glynn Coun.ty, Ga. ~ 24 2. Chemical 8na.lyses of water from test well 2, :B:r"un.s'W:lck, Ga 26 3. Chemical 8na.lyses of contaminated water, Glynn CoUitty, Ga. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33 iv INl'ERIM REPORT ON TEST DRILLIW AND WATER SAMPLING IN THE BRUNSWICK AREA, GLYNN COUNTY, GEOIDIA Robert L. Wait ABSTRACT Brackish water with a chloride content of as much as 320 ppm (parts per million) was found between the depths of l,04o and 1,372 feet in test well 2. Fresh water of the calcium bicarbonate type overlies the brackish-water zone, and fresh water of the magnesium sulfate type underlies it. The brackish water is confined above and below by beds of hard, dense, cherty, dolomitic limestone. Industrial wells ranging in depth from 1,015 to 1,062 feet tap this zone in the well field of the Hercules Powder Co. Water with a chloride content of as much as 1,100 ppm is present between the depths of about 500 and 8oo feet in a triangular area within the city of Brunswick. The presence of high chloride water in this area cannot be explained on the basis of available data. In December 196o water levels were above land surface throughout the county except in the immediate areas of the industrial well fields. The pumpage during 196o in Glynn County was estimated to be about 89 mgd {million gallons per day}. An anticipated increase in pumpage of about 30 mgd will cause water levels to decline below land surface creating a nonflowing area that will extend about 7 miles east and southeastward of the cone of depression at the Brunswick Pulp and Paper Co. well field and about 11 miles westward and northward from it. The increase in pumpage will accelerate the movement of the salty water within the city toward the heavily pumped industrial area. 1 INTRODUCTION Tile first indication of braakish ground water in the Brunswick area was in 1939 when well H at Hercules Powder Co. was found to contain water with a chloride content of 69 ppn. (parts per million). 'lhis was about ~ times more than previously reported (Stewart, 196o, p. 15). Brackish water as used in this report is water that contains more than about 30 ppm chloride. In 1942, the city of Brunswick F Street well was completed to a depth of 1 1 057 feet, and a water sample from the well had a chloride content of 146 ppm. 'lhe well was cemented back to a depth of about 1,000 feet in September 1942, and the chloride content decreased to 81 ppm by July 1943. :Between 1950 and 1958 the chloride content of water from the F Street well and from several wells at Hercules Powder Co. rose significantly. In 1959, the city of Brunswick, Glynn County, the Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology, and the u.s. Geological Survey.began a cooperative investigation to ascertain how and wey the fresh ground water was becoming contaminated by brackish water in the Brunswick-Glynn County area. Purpose and Sco~ Tbe purpose of this report is to present the preliminary results of the I ground-water investigation to determine the source of brackish water contaminating the fresh water-bearing limestone aquifers in Glynn County, Ga. A more detailed report is to be prepared at a later date. Included in this report are the results of test drilling and chemical analyse~ of water samples from the test wells during the test-drilling program, and also the results of an areal water-sampling program. 2 Location of Area Glynn County is in southeastern Georgia on the Atlantic Coast. {See fig. 1.) Brunswick, the county seat, is about 80 miles south of Savannah, Ga., and about 87 miles north of Jacksonville, Fla. 83" 82" 3s?"'-_..oino_..._.~~l-----r+- \ I I h I 34 I I I \ ---- -----83" 82" 150 "' Figure ll'""" Index map showing location of Brunswic k1 Glynn County, Ga. 3 Previous Investigations ' ' Early investigations of the ground-water resources of Glynn County in- elude those of McCallie (1898, 1908), and Stephenson and Veatch (1915). Warren (1944) reported on the artesian water in the coasta.:l:- ,area of Georgia, .~ ' and discussed the occurrence of high chloride water from the F Street well. Recent papers by Stewart and Counts (1958) and Stewart and Croft (1960) discuss the decline of artesian pressure in the coastal area since 1945. Stewart (1960) discussed the history of chloride contamination in the Brunswick area and the possible sources of the contaminant. Acknowledgments ... This investigation is being made by the U.S. Geological Survey in cooperation with the city of Brunswick, Glynn County, and the State Department of Mines' Mining. and Geology. The cooperation and assistance of various city and county officials, and representatives of local industries are gratefully acknowledged. Special thanks are due Mr. Bruce Lovvorn, Brunswick city manager, and to Mr. Howard Sears, county a.dmini.strator, for assistance and courtesies extended during the '. investigation. The assistance of Mr. George Bosserde.tt, manager, Hercules Powder Co., for the u.Se of laboratory facilities is gratefully acknowledged. All samples collected for the areal water-sampling program were analyzed by the Hercules Powder Co. Thanks are also due Mr. John Gayner, manager, and Brunswick Pulp and l>aper Co., Mr. Bruce Smith, manager, Allied Chemical Co., Solvay Process Div., for data supplied and courtesies extended. The cooperation of Mr. A. A. Sickel, Layne-Atlantic Co., for well-construction data and for drill cuttings from wells is also gratefully acknowledged. 4 Well-numbering System The well-numbering system used in this report is based on a 10-minute latitude and longitude grid. Each 10-minute quadrangle of latitude and longitude is identified by a letter -- A through J -- omitting the letter I. Wells within each quadrangle are numbered consecutively. For example, well D-182 is located within quadrangle D which is bounded by lats 3110' and 3120' and longs 8120 1 and 8130'. Other designations such as names or company numbers are in parenthesis beside the well number -- D-182 (test well 2). GEOLOGY Glynn County is underlain by a series of sedimentary rocks consisting of gravel, sand, clay, limestone, and dolomite, which are known to extend to a depth of 4,600 feet. Only those rocks from the land surface to a depth of 2,000 feet are described in this report. The descriptions presented are necessarily brief and are intended to acquaint the reader with the geologic environment in which ground water occurs in the county. The geologic formations are described from the land surface downward, the descriptions being based on a study of drill cuttings. The Recent, Pleistocene, and Pliocene rocks consist of sand, feldspathic argillaceous sand, and gravel, with thin beds of limestone or calcareous sand. A sandy gravel is present near the base of these rocks. 5 The Miocene Series consists of greenish gray fuller's earth, greenish gray sandy silt, feldspathic phosphatic sands, thin phosphatic limestone beds, and silty calcareous sands. The basal part of the Miocene consists of a slightly dolomitic, sandy, phosphatic, fossiliferous limestone. The greenish gray fuller's earth and the greenish gray sandy silt have very low permeability, and act as confining beds that prevent or retard both the upward movement of fresh water and the downward movement of salty water from the ocean. The Oligocene Series consists of sandy phosphatic slightly dolomitic limestone. The limestone is much recrystallized, contains many casts and molds of pelecypods and gastropods, and is characteristically yellowish gray. Its thickness ranges from 50 to 100 feet in Glynn County. The Ocala Limestone consists of white to gray, fossiliferous limestone. Pelecypods and Bryozoa make up much of the upper part of the formation. Zones of recrystallized, hard, dense to porous limestone are present near the top of the formation. Hard, dense to porous, brown dolomitic cherty limestone is present in the Ocala, usually near the base of the formation. This bed of dolomitic limestone is a confining bed below which brackish water occurs on the Brunswick Peninsula. The Ocala Limestone seems to be about 400 to 500 feet thick in Glynn County. The Claiborne Group consists of hard, dense to porous, brown, dolomitic limestone and gray, hard to soft, fossiliferous limestone. The thickness of the Claiborne Group is not definitely known. The brackish water occurs in beds of the Claiborne Group. 6 The limestone beds of the Miocene, Oligocene, and Eocene Series constitute the principal artesian aquifer in Georgia. Wells in Glynn County ranging in depth from about 450 to 1,000 feet obtain water from the principal artesian aquifer. Figure 2 shows the geologic section from test well 2. The section AA' in figure 3 shows the gamma-ray logs for wells along the Brunswick Peninsula from a well in the shipyards {J-35), northward to test wells 1 {J-52) and 2 {D-182). Four identifiable inflection points are present on each of the logs. Peaks A and B are caused by phosphatic sand beds in the Miocene Series. Peak C generally corresponds to a phosphatic sandy dolomitic limestone bed believed to be in the Oligocene Series. Inflection point D corresponds to the top of a hard, dense, somewhat recrystallized white fossiliferous limestone which is probably the Ocala Limestone. Below point D to a depth of at least 1,230 feet the gamma-radiation logs are flat and virtually featureless. The vertical displacement of the four correlation points is as much as 100 feet from well J-35 to well J-52, about 1.4 miles northward. {See fig. 3.) This displacement of the correlation points is believed to have been caused by faulting, but the location and direction of the faulting cannot be determined from the available information. A fault might act as a barrier and retard the northward movement of ground water. It might also allow brackish water to move upward through the fault zone into the fresh water-bearing limestones between the depths of about 500 to 1,000 feet. Thus, faulting, if it exists, may account for the presence of brackish water in the area of the Lewis Crab Factory. 7 GA'-\MA R(>OIATIOf\1 z11.1 11.1 0 0 :::E ., c. c .,. e::> .E C) "' c 0 E :J "'.>< c.> ~ 0 8 0 LITHOLOGY WATER-BEARING PROPERTIES Sand, feldspothic Sufficient 9round woter argillaceous sand, and for domestiC ond smoll Qtovei with. thin beds of industria I purposes. fimestone or calcareous Yields as much os 70 sand; small pelecypods gpm from 3-inch wells. common in upper 50 150 feet deep. Water feet. of calcium bicarbonate type. Fuller's earth, sandy silt, feldspothic phosphatic sands, and slightly dolomitic sondy phosphatic fossiliferous limestone. Flowing wells obtained from sandy limestone and calcareous sand be low depth of 300 feet; ~~~~: 1~n~8s~C:~~~d fl~~" wells by drillers Yields of as much as 300 gpm from 6-inch wells; port of principal artesian aqu1fer. Water of co lcium bicarbonate type. Yellowish-gray sandy phosphatiC slightly dolomitic fossiliferous limestone Flowing wells obtained. Water high in hydrogen sulfide. Flowing wells obtained; White to gray fossil- flows of as much as iferous limestone; 5000 gpm from 25-incll zones of hard, dense wells, 1000 feet recrystallized limestone deep; pumped yields brown dolomitic lime- range up to 11,000 stone near base. gpm. Port of principal artesian aquifer. 11.1 z 11.1 0 0 11.1 c. e::> EXPLANATION C) [2] "/c5' .;Q:; Fine-to Medium-;roined Sand D u Coorse-CJrOined $00d or grovel ~ Calcareous sand or Qrovel ~ Silt 01ttlay ~ t:::::.:.:J Sandy silt or cloy ~ Limestone ES3 Dolomite Chert Flowing wells obtained; brackish water contain- ing as much as 450 ppm chloride is confined b~ cherty dolomitic lime- Hard, dense to porous stone between 1040 dolomitic limestone ond 1372 feet; fresh with interbedded chert; water present below gray fossiliferous brackish-water zone on limestone. Brunswick Peninsula; west of Brunswick Peninsula fresh water present to depth of 1682 feet below which brackish water is present to at least 2020 feet. Figure 2:-Generolized geologic section of Glynn County, Go. as determined from test well 2, and water- bearing properties of rocks. 8 A J-35 North Shipyords well ir /Location of toult unknown J-52 Test well I -100' j,, -20 I L----~~~--------~ -300' ----iI ~---.=--'-!- 1--------r~ -400' -sod , I ----1_______ _ ____ j -600' ----~ I OE3::::J:=3:::::EF"""'3~03::.5=EF"""'3:=C::::EF"""'33C:j: MILE -7oo~~----~~----------~--------------------------~---------------------------~L-~ Figure 3.-Gamma-ray log section along Brunswick Peninsula, showing displacement of correlative points. See fig. II for location of section; see text for discussion of letter symbols. TEST DRILLING Two test wells have been drilled in Brunswick since the start of the investigation in 1959. Test well 1 (J-52) was completed as an outpost well for monitoring the upper part of the principal artesian aquifer. Test well 2 (D-182) was drilled to determine the depths at which salty and fresh water occur, and to determine the geologic environment of each of these types of water. Test well 1 (J-52) is an old city well that was cleaned and deepened to 6oo feet and recased with 3-inch casing to a depth of 545 feet. The well is at the northeast corner of Norwich and F Streets. (See fig. 11.) It was hoped that this well could be deepened to 2,000 feet, but the small diameter of the casing near the bottom of the well prevented this. As constructed the well taps the upper part of the principal artesian aquifer and ends in the Ocala Limestone. It is equipped with a recording pressure gage, and water samples for partial chemical analyses are taken from it monthly. Test well 2 is on a vacant lot near the corner of Brailsford Avenue and First Street in the northwestern part of the city. (See fig. 11.) The well is nearly midway between Hercules Powder Co. and the Brunswick Pulp and Paper Co. well fields. 10 This well was drilled to a depth of 1,730 feet by the rotary method. Several modifications were used, descriptions of which are pertinent to the type of data obtained. From the land surface to a depth of 550 feetj drilling fluid was used to circulate the drill cuttings from the hole. The well was then cased to 54o feet with 6-inch casing, cleaned of drilling fluid and cored to a depth of 1,200 feet using fresh water to circulate the drill cuttings. The cores thus obtained were tested to determi.ne the permeability of the limestone. The air-lift reverse-circulation method was ~sed to drill from 1,200 feet to 1,730 feet. This method of drilling enabled the collection of water samples every 10 :feet for dete:rm.ina.tior:.s of. "t.he~.r chloride content and hardness. The analyses of water samples collected by this method agreed closely with those taken by means of packer tests. Drilling tools were lost in test well 2 and could not be recovered. This halted drilling short of the total contracted depth of 2,000 teet. The well was cemented back to a depth of 1,108 feet aud will be completed as an observation well according to the initial plan. A well (E-137, company well 10) was :'borrowed" :f'".rom the Brunswick Pulp and Paper co. and was deepened from 889 to 2,020 feet to satisfy the drilling contracte Water samples were taken from isolated zones in the aquifer by means of ~ackers during deepening. Additional water sample~ were taken below 889 feet by means of air-lift reverse-circulationo 11 GROUND WATER The pumpage of ground water in Glynn County in 196o was estimated to be 89 mgd (million gallons per day), 42 mgd more than the 47 mgd in 1943 estimated by Warren (1944, p. 24). This increase, amounting to about 90 percent in 17 years, has resulted in declines in artesian pressure ranging from about 23 feet near the center of pumpage to 16 feet about 8 miles eastward on St. Simons Island and about 11 feet 3. 5 miles southwestward. The rate of decline is about 0.4 foot per mgd of increase near the center of pumpage, about 0.3 foot per mgd on St. Simons Island, and about 0.2 foot per mgd 3.5 miles southwestward from the center of pumpage. The center of pumpage is about 3 miles northwest of the city hall. Piezometric Surface Figure 4 shows the piezometric surface, or pressure surface of the principal artesian aquifer in Glynn County in December 196o. The piezometric surface represents the height above sea level to which water would rise in properly constructed wells tapping the principal artesian aquifer. Two small cones of depression around well fields, one of the Hercules Powder Co. and the other of the Brunswick Pulp and Paper Co., form the center of the major cone of depression in the piezometric surface. The cone of depression around the Hercules Powder Co. well field is indicated by 5-foot and 10-foot closed contours and that around the Brunswick Pulp and Paper Co. well field by a 10-foot closed contour. These two small cones merge to form the large cone indicated by the 15-foot contour, which is elongated east and west. In 196o the pumpage was 24.4 mgd at Hercules Powder Co., 34 mgd at Brunswick Pulp and Paper Co., and 13.4 mgd at Solvay Process Division of Allied Chemical Co., which is immediately north of Brunswick Pulp and Paper Co. 12 0 B c0 u N r .. . .. G D I!; X ' L A N A T I 0 It ' --;:::-..!~==- CiCtoottowo.tw.............."..............,t~lel'r- i.l. l_ wf_ ltl..... ...... ,._,., .......c.,.................., .......... ...,,, , !!10----:---"'-,. ..u ou~,.ft --- .t.lillellleRI.,,...fl'-ol--.lrlc .....roc., f.. I 1 --+----------------~---~-- - - ~-------+------j aou .... 1, .,~-0IMo- "'" oiCI""C"""I G-"SNIO"' Figure 4.-Piezometric surface, Glynn County, Ga., December 1960. The cone of depression at Hercules Powder Co. is deeper and steeper than that at the Brunswick Pulp and Paper Co., even though the latter cone reflects the result of about 41 percent greater rate of.. pum. p,i. ng... - "' T..h.e. reasons for this appear to be thet the transmissibility is lower in the area of the Hercules Powder Co. and that the pumpage is concentrated in a smaller area. The major cone of depression j_s steepest on the south side, having a gradient of about 12 feet per mile. On the east and north the gradient is about 5 feet per mile; on the west it is about 3 feet per mile. An eastward-trending piezometric ridge occurs along the southern border of the county, roughly paralleling the county line. The pie~ometric surface is about 50 feet above sea level atop this ridge and slopes rather gently at about 2.5 feet per mile northward to the vicinity of the south end of the Brunswick Peninsula. From that area northward to the 15-foot contour south of the Hercules Powder Co. the gradient increases sharply to about 10 feet per mile. From the south end to the north end of Jekyll Island it is about 1.2 feet per mile. From the north end of Jekyll Island to the south end of St. Simons Island, the gradient is much steeper -- about 5 feet per mile. Such abrupt changes in gradient might indicate a barrier, whose nature, if it exists, is not known. Possible explanations include a series of faults in the area of the Brunswick River or a decrease in the transmissibility of the limestone. This zone of more steeply sloping water levels is present from the north end of Jekyll Island westward to the vicinHy of the Turtle River immediately west of the Brunswick Peninsula. 14 The piezometric surface ranges from 25 to 35 feet above s~a level on St. Simons Island, its height generally increasing toward the seaward side of the island. The fact that water levels are above sea level eastward of the cone of depression is additional evidence that lateral encroachment of salt water has not occurred and that sea water is not the source of the contaminant in the Brunswick areao The piezometric surface is about 30 feet above sea level along the ground-water divide at the northern boundary of the county. North of this divide the gradient, and hence the direction of movement of ground water, is generally northeastward toward Savannah. The gradient from the divide southwestward toward the center of the cone of depression is about 5 feet per mile. Predicted Drawdowns Figure 5 is a theoretical drawdown graph, based on a coefficient of transmissibility of 1 mgd per foot, and a storage coefficient of 0.0003. The coefficient of transmissibility is the amount of water, in gallons per d~, that would flow through a vertical strip of the aquifer one foot wide having a height equal to the thickness of the aquifer under a unit hydraulic gradient. The coefficient of storage is the amount of water released from each vertical column of the aquifer having a base of 1 foot square when the piezometric surface declines one foot. These coefficients can be used to predict the decline of water levels due to pumping by use of the Theis equation (Wenzel, 1942, p. 87-91). The values used here were obtained from the piezometric map and a short term pumping testo The graphs show the amount of drawdown that would occur at various distances from a well after pumping at a rate of 1 mgd for l day, 1 year, and 10 years. The graph can be used to predict the effect of pumpage, and to determine the optimum spacing of wells 15 1.0 I- w w 1..1... z -m ~ 1.5 z 3: 0 0 3:: Ul \ c z (J) 0 z Q) o<= .-. as CaC03 ..H..... Q) '."..". 'H"0" '"" u Q) Q) 0 :> ::lO ., ., .-<'00() 0 ....4 ~ ., Q) ..... ...... )...! ctl A'-' s ". "., s .... ..< Q) u <= .-<00 Q) ..... "'I <= <= z0 .o.0.. u"'"s' "u' Q) u.-. ..<...l:o.:,u., UN "'"<"l....l. 0 UOJ .:::i0j 4...-.I.Q.. u., .u... <>-S C/) ....... :.:c,. 540- 560 Free flow 5-24-60 79 37 576- 600 Packer test l 5-31-60 80 36 683- 702 2 6- 7-60 81 39 789- 806 3 6-l4-6b 81 34 887- 908 4 6~ l7 -60 81 35 992-1,010 N "' , 041-1,084 ,174-1,200 5 6-24-60 81 37 6 8- 1-60 82 37 8 8~22-60 82 35 540-1,200 Composite sample 8-23-60 81 36 ,288-1,300 Packer test 9 2-27-61 82 35 ,372-1,400 10 3- 3-61 82 32 ,478-1,500 ll 3- 9-61 82 31 ,580-1,600 12 3-15-61 82.5 33 ,679-1,703 970- 990 1 ,050-1,053 ,052-1,065 ,132-l, 134 13 (1) ( 1) (1) ( 1) 4-14-61 6-23-61 7-26-60 7-28-60 8-11-60 83 30 81 37 81 35 82 35 --- 35 0.22 48 .04 53 .05 48 .02 56 .08 45 ,05 45 .08 86 ,o7 7-4 .06 82 .06 134 .07 106 .o 90 .04 55 .04 54 .19 45 1.0 82 .50 102 .98 107 24 17 26 30 22 26 29 35 20 13 24 17 45 85 40 72 47 77 69 190 71 20 51 21 39 24 37 34 25 17 50 90 62 124 64 138 2.0 146 0 100 18 0.6 O;O 2.1 146 0 102 52 .5 .o 1.8 150 0 75 34 ,6 .0 2.2 150 0 120 56 .6 .o 1.7 150 0 76 14 7 .o 1.7 146 0 85 20 .5 .0 3.7 146 0 220 153 .6 .0 3.3 146 0 196 122 7 .o 3.7 144 0 228 148 .6 .o 4.8 148 0 2.3 132 0 414 320 .7 3.4 430 18 1.2 .o 1.9 132 0 328 20 1.1 .3 2.2 134 --- 196 24 .9 .o 2.6 134 0 195 32 1.1 .1 2.0 148 0 92 20 .6 .0 3.5 144 0 242 162 .6 .o 4.2 146 0 298 235 .6 .8 4.6 146 0 330 252 .6 .6 1.6 0.0 333 .. .8 .o 381 218 99 239 120 .8 .o 356 210 88 --- --- 420 258 136 --- --- 282 194 72 --- --- 350 . 211 92 495 7.7 604 7.6 530 7.4 - 665 7.3 435 7.6 479 7.4 1.6 .o 758 400 280 1,170 7.2 .8 .o 623 349 230 990 7.4 1.6 1.0 723 398 280 1,130 7.5 1.6 1.3 ,450 618 496 1,950 7.5 .o .2 815 556 448 1,020 7.6 .o --- 657 434 326 863 7.7 --- --- 476 298 188 670 7.9 --- --- 484 286 176 701 --- --- --- 344 216 94 485 7.5 1.6 .o 770 410 292 1,170 7.4 1.6 .o ,120 510 390 1,540 7.5 1.6 .o ,060 530 410 1,620 7.5 1 Flow through drill rods. 500 ~~ 600 ~,$$'_}y,& 700 ~///#////////////A 8 00 EXPLANATION ~ l-lardness as CoC03 ~ Chloride content ~ 900-~~ ~ a:: :::> (/) ~ OQ- ~ Q, -- . __ 'i...... -- I 0~ 000000000<:'~~/~.~""-""~""'.............~ Hardness as CoC03 ILl !D II 00 1t.LJ ILl IL. z 1200 .J .J ILl 3: \ } <.......... _1_ Q<: W~$~~ -Packed interval ....... ...... <.., ', t I vChloride content ) ~ IL. 1300 0 \ ~ :I: 1a.-. ILl 0 1400 KS ...... . ' .................... ~ 2000 0 300 600 900 1200 6. Composite sample of flow from well to depth indicated 1. --o-__ r-o.. ~ ~ f 1500 1800 2100 PARTS PER Ml LLI 0 N Figure I0.- Chloride content and hardness of water from Brunswick Pulp and Paper Co. well 10. 30 In contrast with test well 2, the chloride and hardness profiles of well 10 show that no pronounced brackish-water zone is present in the interval l,04o to 1,378 feet. The chloride content of the water did not increase until chert beds were penetrated between the depths of 1,708 and 1,743 feet. !elow the chert beds, both the chloride content and the hardness of water increased greatly, and also the flow from the well increased from about 2,000 gpm to more than 4,000 gpm. A comparison of these data with those from test well 2 shows the complexity of the problem of determining at what depth brackish water occurs in Glynn County. Information obtained from test well 2 indicates that on the !runswick Peninsula the brackish-water zone is generally at the depth interval from l,04o to 1,378 feet. The deepening of !runswick Pulp and Paper Co. well 10 shows that immediately west of the peninsula a zone of brackish water is present at much greater depth, beginning about 1,743 feet. Areal Water Sampling Since September 1959, water samples have been collected for partial chemical analysis from wells throughout the county to determine the chloride content and hardness of the ground water. The sampling program indica,tes that in a triangular area within the city of !runswick (fig. 11) the chloride content of the water ranges from 2 to 40 times the calculated average. (See table 1.) The area extends from the foot ofF Street, southward along Oglethorpe Bay as far as Lewis Crab Factory, Inc., and northeastward as far as the Miller Funeral Home. Table 3 lists the complete chemical analyses of water from some wells that yield contaminated water. 31 _j_35- Water-level contour Contours show altitude of piezometric surface. Arrows show general direction of ground-water movement. Contour interval 5 feet. Datum is mean sea level EXPLANATION '0 Domestic well 103 Industrial or municipal well ~ Oil-test well Area of chloride contamination 108 Chloride content, 1961 52 (3) Well number (company number) A A' Alinernent of gamma-log section, fig. 3 Figure 11:-Chloride content of water in city of Brunswick, Go., 1960-61 . 32 Tabl.e 3.--Cbemica.l. a.nalyses of contaminated water, Gl.ynn County, Ga. (Anal.yses by U.S. Geol.ogica.l. Survey) Well Owner D-58 Hercules Powder Co. Well N H-8 Massey Oil Test J-9 Hercules Powder Co. Well J J-1.2 !Hercules Powder Co. Wel.l. 0 J-48 City o:f Brunswick 1.525 Grant St. J-51. City o:f Brunswick F Street Well J-52 !usGS Test Well 1. J-77 !Lewis Crab Factory Well 4 J-1.03 ~Brunswick Laundry J-202 jl\bbotts Ice House J-205 !Lewis Crab Factory J-21.3 ~ller Funeral. Hane Parts per million 'tl'tl ~a Pt.-1,..... ~~~~ 2""!1.~-i'~H $..s...:~ nQ~) Date o:f pol.l.ection ~ 0 ~ ,..... (\J Q) ~ j"'f.< .0.... ~ "';.:.":.1.. ,..... ! 1': 0 f.< Ul H ,..... 3 "',..... ,..... ! ~ j ..... ..... "' g"j u ;a 0 Ul g ..... ~""'' p0.. ,..... CY) 0 ,..... !! $ ~ CY) 0 ~ $ -:,. 0 ~ 0 ~ i"l ~ 0 ~ u ~ Ul -;:::;~ E ,..... CY) ,..... 3 ! .~.... .~.... $ ~ f.< f.< g0 ~ .1"1' i2! ! 560-1.,050 8-8-60 82 38 0.1.3 70 4o 70 3.1. 1.50 0 202 1.2C 0.9 o.o o.B 61.0-? 8-1.4-59 71 18 .1.3 IJ.68 1.29 655 1..2 34 4 752 l,l.OC 1..1. .2 5.0 547-1.,060 8- 8-60 81. 36 .08 IJ.32 82 222 55 1.46 0 468 385 1..0 .o 3.2 - 545-1.,014 8- 4-61. 84 34 .09 1129 82 226 55 1.48 0 457 393 9 .1 44o-1,003 7-31.-59 79 34 .20 58 34 52 .2 14o 0 1.60 85 .6 .o 5 478-957 546-600 ? -780 ? -86o 540-780 -688 - 8- 8-60 78 35 .06 56 29 37 2.3 154 0 130 1.-1.9-60 72 6.c .8 25 26 41. 6.6 79 0 94 - 1.0- 4-60 35 .o6 91. uS 385 8.2 1.42 0 714 - 3- 9-61. 35 .06 78 67 ll2 32 1.48 0 274 3- 9-61. 8o 36 .46 4o 94 24o 59 1.4o 0 548 1.0- 4-60 - 33 .ll 82 1.03 328 7.4 1.48 0 632 3- 9-61. 70 35 .09 8o 66 1.00 3.1 148 0 262 61. 5 .1 1..6 74 5 670 1..0 .o 3 - - 1.87 .6 .4 4oo .6 4.7 570 1..0 .o 1.60 .6 8.8 - s u .~.... 0 Hardness as CaCO, .-1 .-1 ,..... g~.., .P'"Q,)..... oKJ' ~.., 0 ~ ~ ~ H a 'tl ..... ~ ~!I>~.,~ "iri "' ~~ o~ Q) ."...'. 1': IOl 0 $ ~ 0 g~ " :.; ~""~0' ..... s.. "~1l" Ul~ Ill "" o.o 684 342 21.8 944 75 3 3,000 950 .o 1.,550 666 - 1,646 659 91.5 4,64o 8.7 547 2,090 7.4 538 2,24o 77 .2 564 284 1.70 8o8 8.0 .o 420 258 1.32 688 8.3 - 372 1.70 1.05 572 8.1. - 2,408 962 845 3,220 73 - 990 470 348 1.,320 7.6 - 1.,760 736 622 2,38o 7.4 - 2,ll0 878 756 2,870 7.4 - 930 471 350 1,264 79 The area of highest chloride content is at the Lewis Crab Factory. Four of the wells ranged in depth from about 6oo to 800 feet and yielded water in which the chloride content ranged from 428 to 752 ppm in early April 1961. Two of the wells were plugged with cement in late April. On April 21, 1961 (before plugging), water samples were taken from one of the wells while it flowed through a pipe lowered into the well. A volume of water equal to that contained in the pipe was discharged before sampling. The results of the sampling are listed below: Depth (Feet below land surface) Chloride (ppm) Hardness as CaC03 (ppm) 420 672 74o 500 6o6 793 Goo 616 98o 66o Goo 972 694 220 502 694 94 296 (sampled after flowing an additional 20 minutes through lt-inch pipe.) The chloride content of all samples was higher than average. The chloride content of the sample from 694 feet was lowest. Further reduction occurred after the water flowed for an additional 20 minutes from this depth. The source of the high-chloride water in the wells is not known, but the chemical character coincides closely with that of other wells tapping the brackish-water zone below 1,000 feet. 34 Three other wells in the city area yielded brackish water. They are owned by the Brunswick Laundry (J-103), Abbotts Ice House (J-202), and Miller Funeral Home (J-213). The chloride content and hardness of water samples collected March 9, 1961, from these wells is given below: Well OWner Chloride (ppm) Hardness as Caco3 (ppm) J-202 Abbotts Ice House 400 736 J-103 Brunswick Laundry 187 470 J-213 Miller Funeral Home 16o 471 Eastward of a line from the well at Millers Funeral Home to the well at Abbotts Ice House the chloride content of water decreases. Two wells on the southern tip of the Brunswick Peninsula, one owned by the Babcock and Wilcox Co. (J-36) and one at the Sidney Lanier Bridge (J-212) also yield water with a higher than average chloride content. The Babcock and Wilcox Co. well had a chloride content of 118 ppm and hardness of 384 ppm on June 27, 1961, after 24 hours of continuous flow. The well at the Sidney Lanier Bridge had a chloride content of 92 ppm and a hardness of 320 ppm on February 2, 1961. Subsequent analyses show that the chloride content and the hardness of water from these wells still remain higher than average. Well J-36 is 1,007 feet deep according to the driller's records, and well J-212 is reported by the driller to be about 850 feet deep. Two wells owned by the Brunswick Quick Freeze Co. (J-207 and J-209) had chloride contents of 85 and 84 ppm on October 4, 1960. Since then, the chloride content of water from well J-207 has varied from 46 to 85 ppm. Two other wells at the plant, wells J-44 and J-208, had chloride contents of 22 and 21 ppm on October 5, 1960. Probably these two wells are shallower and have less casing than wells J-207 and J-209, and obtain water from near 35 the top of the principal artesian aquifer. A well owned by the Whorton Crab Co. (J-210) immediately west of the Brunswick Quick Freeze plant, had a chloride content of 21 ppm on October 5, 1960. This well is 700 feet deep according to the driller, but the depth to which it is cased is not known. Two abandoned oil-test wells, the J. H. Massey well (H-8) on Colonel's Island and the E. P. Curry well (H-20) just west of u.s. Highway 17 near the Glynn-Camden County line, have high chloride contents. There is no record of either well having been plugged and both wells are sources of chloride contamination to the upper fresh water-bearing limestones. The Massey oiltest well has been sampled monthly since January 1960, and the chloride content of its water has varied from 844 to 5,150 ppm. The well was drilled to a depth of 4,614 feet. Water from the Curry oil-test well had a chloride content of 360 ppm on July 20, 1960. It was drilled to a depth of 2,050 feet before being abandoned. Both of these oil-test wells penetrate the brackish-water zone and allow upward movement of brackish water through the well bores and into the fresh-water zone above 1,000 feet. These wells should be plugged to prevent contamination of the fresh-water zones. Partial chemical analyses have been made of water samples collected from the wells at Hercules Powder Co. since 1958. The producing wells range from 668 to 1,062 feet in depth. Of the 12 supply wells, 7 yielded water with a chloride content that ranged from 138 to 430 ppm in September 1961. The depths of these 7 wells range from 1,014 to 1,062 feet. Five wells, ranging in depth from 668 to 1,049 feet, yielded water with a chloride content ranging from 24 to 32 ppm in September 1961. Figure 12 shows the chloride content of the water from three of these wells in 1950 and 1958-61. Well L (J-11) is 1,000 feet deep and the chloride content of the water from it varied from 25 to 35 ppm. Well K (J-10), 800 feet west of well L, is 1,053 feet deep, and the chloride content of the water from it increased from about 170 ppm in March 1958 to 274 ppm in September 1961. Since 1958, the chloride content of water from the well has varied from 200 to 300 ppm. Well 0 (J-12) is 1,014 feet deep, and the chloride content of water from this well has increased from 75 ppm in 1950 to more than 400 ppm in September 1961. The records for wells 0 (J-12) and K (J-10) exhibit the typical increase in chloride content and hardness of water from the deeper wells in the Hercules well field. Well L is typical of the wells in which no increase in chloride content or hardness has occurred. The depth to the upper confining bed of the brackish-water zone appears to be very irregular in this well field. A preliminary examination of gamma ray and electric logs shows displacement of traceable beds between adjacent wells, which probably indicates faulting with vertical displacement of a magnitude of several tens of feet. City of Brunswick F Street Well The F Street well (J-51), (table 3 and fig. 13), was completed for the city of Brunswick in 1942 to a depth of 1,057 feet. A water sample collected July 9, 1942 (Warren, 1944, p. 136), contained 146 ppm chloride or about five times as much chloride as had previously been found in other wells in the area. Water from a well at 1525 Grant Street (J-48), reported to be 1,007 feet deep, and about 4oo feet east of the F Street well, had a chloride content of 16 ppm when sampled in 1931 (Collins, Lamar, and Lohr, 193~ P 55). 37 z 400 0 _j -_j ~ a::: w a_ 300 (f) 1a::-: ~ ~ z Vol CX> 1- zw 200 1z 0 (.) w 0a-::: 0_j 100 I (.) 0 p. I I Well "o" Depth 1,014 ft , ,,--A..' 'tf~\ I \ f ~ I I I ;...c>~ ' ' \ \ I I I I I I I \ I - P"" ,P'.P J>--o..-c'" .P ~/"-o-o \ I ' Well "K" '' f / ' l'SI Depth 1,053 tt \u \ "'-~ ' 1 c"! / ~_/ - / / ( ! - Well "L' Depth 1,000 ft - 1961 Figure 12.-Chloride content of water from 3 wells at Hercules Powder Co. Other nearby wells about 6oo feet deep had chloride contents ranging from 16 to 18 ppm. No determinations of chloride content of water from the shallower wells are available for 1942, but a water sample collected in 1941 from the well at 1525 Grant Street had a chloride content of 18 ppm (Lamar, 1942, p. 38). A cement plug was placed in the F Street well at the depth interval from 1,057 feet to about 1,000 feet in September 1942, and by July 1943 the chloride content of the water had decreased to 81 ppm. No analyses are available for the period 1944-50. A sample taken in 1951 by the u.s. Geological Survey had a chloride content of 202 ppm and a hardness as calcium carbonate of 578 ppm. In late 1957 complaints by citizens about the taste and corrosiveness of the water prompted action by the city of Brunswick. Water flowing from the well had a chloride content of 103 ppm, a hardness of 880 ppm, and dissolved-solids content of 2,250 ppm. The pump was removed, and a pipe was lowered into the well to take water samples at various depths. The chloride content, dissolved-solids content, and hardness of the water increased with depth. Drilling fluid was pumped into the well to prevent flow and to equalize the pressure, and cement grout was pumped into the well through a pipe lowered to the bottom of the well. The cement grout was extended upward from a depth of 1,000 feet to a depth of 957 feet to seal off brackish water. A pumped water sample taken February 26, 1958, after the cementing was completed and the mud was cleaned out of the hole, had 112 ppm chloride, 340 ppm hardness, and 840 ppm dissolved solids. The chloride content of the water was 9 ppm greater than prior to cementing, but the hardness was reduced by 540 ppm and the dissolved solids by 1,410 ppm. 39 Figure 13 shows the reduction in chloride content of the F Street well as a result of cementing approximately 100 feet in the bottom of the well and compares the chloride content with that of well H (J-7) at Hercules Powder Co., which has not been cemented. Complete chemical analyses were made of water collected from this well by the u.s. Geological Survey in August 1959 and August 1960. Both samples were taken with the pump running. ~e chloride content, dissolved-solids content, and hardness of the water are given below: Chloride Hardness as Dissolved solids Date (ppm) Caco (ppm) (ppm) 3 August 3, 1959 55 2~ 4w August 8, 19W 61 258 420 ~ese analyses show further reductions in chloride, hardness, and dissolved solids as compared to the sample taken in February 1958. Contam- inated water probably had moved up the bore of the well and laterally into the fresh water-bearing limestone during periods when the pump was inopera- tive, and had not been completely flushed out when that sample was collected immediately after the well was cemented. The well has been sampled monthly and partial chemical analyses made since September 1959. Figure 13 shows the results of these analyses. The chloride content has varied from 52 to 170 ppm since that time. A rapid in- crease in the chloride content of the water began in June 1961 and continued to October 1961. Although part of the increase in chloride content is probably a seasonal variation, due to increased pumpage during the summer months, the largest part is more likely indicative of northward movement of brackish water caused by a slight increase in use of water at the Brunswick Pulp and Paper Co. starting in late March 1961. 40 11 943 ft I I l l I I I I I I I I I I 11 I I I I I t I I I I t I I t t I I I I I I I 500 960 ft Natural flow through ;.. pipe at depth indicated 843ft 743ft z r- - 0 - ....J .-...J ~ 400 aw:: - ~ (/) 1a:-: <( -~ ~ 300 z Hercules "H" well ~ It I I cr ... "'C\ II I \. I I I I II -"""\ ~~/"- ...., ,sf "" I I I ........ tx>-~ '"o.. / 1''\\J S\. ' 'b.."''", --o..-c~ - n I II \ .. I Ni,b-.o-..& i. ~ ~ .z........ w r- I I - 1z - 0 v,l l (.) w 200 0 a:: 0 ....J - :I: (.) 100 /. /~ \ ~I I I v \ l I Q ........ ~..i City of Brunswick "F' Street well Cemented back to 957 feet L_ j\ ( ...., ----------~I w~ I I I I I I I I I I I ..a I 1~11 I IV 1~A111111 ~ l\1 ~ I'(') rio 0on I() ~ I() - - - - - cn'm'm'cn'~cn 1958 1959 1960 1961 Figure 13.-Change in chloride content with time, in city of Brunswick F Street well and Hercules Powder Co. well H. Also shown on figure 13 is a graph showing the chloride content of water from well H (J-7) at the Hercules Powder Co. during the same period. Well H is 1,062 feet deep and taps the top of the brackish-water zone. Notable increases in the chloride content of the water occurred from 1943 to 1958. Since then, the chloride content has varied from 300 to 350 ppm. The cementing effectively reduced the mineral content of water from the F Street well, whereas the chloride content of Hercules well H has continued to increase. The technique of cementing, wherein drilling fluid is placed in the well before cementing, appears to be more successful than other techniques. If drilling fluid is not placed in the hole prior to cementing, the cement plug might be channeled by upward movement of water, thereby making the plug ineffective. CONCLUSIONS Brackish water with a chloride content of as much as 320 ppm was found between the depths of 1,040 and 1,378 feet. This brackish water is confined between beds of hard dense cherty dolomitic limestone. Supply wells at the Hercules Powder Co., ranging in depth from 1,014 to 1,062 feet, tap this same brackish-water zone and yield water with a chloride content ranging from 138 to 430 ppm. Wells tapping this brackish-water zone below 1,040 feet constitute a hazard to the fresh-water zone above it. Current-meter tests show these wells allow the brackish water to move upward through the well bore and into the overlying fresh-water zone. Wells that tap the brackish-water zone should be plugged to prevent upward movement of brackish water. Additional supply wells should be limited in depth to prevent further occurrences of this condition. 42 An increase in pumpage from the fresh-water zone between the depths of about 500 and 1,000 feet will further increase the difference in head between the fresh-water and brackish-water zones and will accelerate upward movement of brackish water to the fresh-water zone. In areas where the confining bed has been breached, or where it is more pervious or thinner than at test well 2, increases in the chloride content of water will occur. Brackish water is present between the depths of about 500 and 8oo feet in a triangular area within the city of Brunswick, extending from the F Street well southward as far as the Lewis Crab Factory wells, and then northeastward to a well at the Miller Funeral Home. The chloride content of water within this area is as much as 1,000 ppm. The presence of brackish water here cannot be explained on the basis of available data. This area of contamination is immediately upgradient from both the Hercules Powder Co. and the Brunswick Pulp and Paper Co. well fields. Recent increases in the chloride content of wells near the north end of this contaminated area indicate the chloride front is now moving northward. Projected increases in pumpage at the Brunswick Pulp and Paper Co. will accelerate the movement of the brackish water toward that well field. As the brackish water moves northward it will contaminate wells that obtain water from between the depths of about 500 and 1,000 feet, including the city well at the foot of F Street and the well at 1525 Grant Street. Test wells should be drilled between the advancing brackish-water front and the well fields of the Hercules Powder Co. and the Brunswick Pulp and Paper Co. to determine the rate of movement and the location of the brackish water. The wells should be equipped with recording pressure gages and water samples should be taken monthly from them for chemical analyses. 43 Two test wells should also be drilled in the area of the Lewis Crab Factory to determine the depth at which brackish water occurs, and also to determine the presence or absence of the confining bed such as that found at l,04o feet in test well 2. These two wells would also aid in determining the location of the fault believed to be present in that area, and its relation to the deterioration of water there. During the deepening of Brunswick Pulp and Paper Co. well 10 brackish water was not encountered until a depth of 1,743 feet was reached. This means that the zone of confined brackish water that occurs between the depths of 1,040 and 1,372 feet in test well 2 is limited in lateral extent. Present indications are that this brackish-water body is present only on the Brunswick Peninsula. The lateral variation in the depth to the contaminated zone illustrates the complexity of the geologic conditions that govern the occurrence of the brackish water. The absence of the brackish-water zone at Brunswick Pulp and Paper Co. well 10 also accounts for the lack of increase in the chloride content of water from deep wells in that well field. Controlled pumping tests are needed to determine as precisely as possible the coefficients of transmissibility and storage. At present the values are known only within extremely wide limits. These data are necessary to determine the effects of added withdrawals of ground water, as well as to determine the rate of movement of ground water. Additional electric and gamma ray logging are needed to aid in interpreting the geology of the area, and to help locate the fault believed to be present near the south end of the peninsula. Continued monitoring of existing wells will show changes in the chemical character of water with time, and also will help to determine the rate and direction of movement of the brackish-water body present in the city of Brunswick. 44 REFERENCES CITED Collins, W. D., Lamar, W. L., and Lohr, E. W., 1934, The industrial utility of public water supplies in the United States, 1932: u.s. Geol. Survey Water-Supply Paper 658, 135 p. Lamar, w. L., 1942, Industrial quality of public water supplies in Georgia: u.s. Geol. Survey Water-Supply Paper 912, 83 p. McCallie, s. W., 1898, A preliminary report on the artesian well system of Georgia: Georgia Geol. Survey Bull. 7, 214 p. ---------- 1908, A preliminary report on the underground waters of Georgia: Georgia Geol. Survey Bull. 15, 376 p. Stephenson, L. W., and Veatch, J. 0., 1915, Underground waters of the Coastal Plain of Georgia, and a discussion of the quality of the water by R. B. Dole: U.S. Geol. Survey Water-Supply Paper 341, 539 p. Stewart, J. W., 196o, Relation of salty ground water to fresh artesian water in the Brunswick area, Glynn County, Georgia: Georgia Geol. Survey Inf. Circ. 20, 42 p. Stewart, J. W., and Counts, H. B., 1958, Decline of artesian pressures in the Coastal Plain of Georgia, northeastern Florida, and southeastern South Carolina: Georgia Geol. Survey Mineral Newsletter, v. 11, no. 1, p. 25-31. Stewart, J. w., and Croft, M. G., 1960, Ground-water withdrawals and decline of artesian pressures in the coastal counties of Georgia: Georgia Geol. Survey Mineral Newsletter, v. 13, no. 2, p. 84-93 45 Warren, M. A., 1944, Artesian water in southeastern Georgia with special reference to the coastal area: Georgia Geol. Survey Bull. 49, 14o p. Wenzel, L. K., 1942, Methods for determining permeability of water-bearing materials : U.S. Geol. Survey Water-Supply Paper 887, 192 p. 46