Estimated Hydrogeologic, Spatial, and Temporal Distribution of Self-Supplied Domestic Groundwater Withdrawals for Aquifers of the Virginia Coastal Plain

Scientific Investigations Report 2025-5051
Prepared in cooperation with Virginia Department of Environmental Quality
By:  and 

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  • Document: Report (13.5 MB pdf) , HTML , XML
  • Data Release: USGS data release - Estimated aquifer distribution for private domestic wells; estimated spatial distribution of the self-supplied domestic population for 2020 and 2010; and estimated monthly domestic self-supplied withdrawals of groundwater for the Virginia Coastal Plain
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Abstract

Water use from private-domestic wells accounts for nearly 40 percent of total groundwater withdrawals in the Virginia Coastal Plain Physiographic Province (henceforth called the Virginia Coastal Plain). However, because self-supplied domestic water use generally falls below the Virginia Department of Environmental Quality (VDEQ) reporting and management threshold of 300,000 gallons per month, quantifying these withdrawals is challenging. This report builds upon the foundation of previous U.S. Geological Survey investigations by providing revised techniques to improve estimates of the aquifer source, spatial distribution, and monthly magnitude of these groundwater withdrawals.

The aquifer sources of private-domestic wells in the Virginia Coastal Plain were estimated by cross-referencing 8,264 well records from the VDEQ and the Virginia Department of Health to a digital model of the Virginia Coastal Plain hydrogeologic framework. This analysis highlights the regional importance of the Yorktown-Eastover, Potomac, and surficial aquifers. Collectively, these three aquifers account for 80 percent of self-supplied domestic groundwater withdrawals.

The population using self-supplied domestic water was estimated using census blocks, well-use ratios, building footprints, and land-use and land-cover data to produce a high-resolution, disaggregated, raster-based dataset. This approach improves upon previous models at the census-block or road-network scale by reducing the low-density spread of the self-supplied domestic population across undeveloped areas and concentrating the population and its corresponding water use in the areas where it is most likely to occur. Results show that an estimated 475,332 people comprise the 2020 self-supplied domestic population of the Virginia Coastal Plain, an increase of 5.7 percent since 2010, and the greatest concentrations of self-supplied domestic population surround large cities. Estimates could be further refined with the addition of current and complete spatial data on public water-system service areas.

The quantity of water used by the self-supplied domestic population was estimated by modifying published state per-capita water-use coefficients with the corresponding monthly variability assessed from Virginia Coastal Plain public water-system withdrawal data. This analysis estimates an average increase of 12 percent from June through August and an average decrease of 8 percent from December through March from the baseline annual average of 80 gallons per day per capita, which generally matches similar studies in the eastern United States.

The application of these revised methodologies for the estimation of private-domestic wells and the self-supplied domestic population improves understanding of domestic groundwater use in the Virginia Coastal Plain across hydrogeologic, spatial, and temporal scales. These revisions help better inform water-resource managers and decision makers and support higher resolution groundwater modeling. Furthermore, these methods are transferrable to other areas where self-supplied domestic water withdrawals are important to the overall water budget.

Suggested Citation

Kearns, M.R., and Pope, J.P., 2025, Estimated hydrogeologic, spatial, and temporal distribution of self-supplied domestic groundwater withdrawals for aquifers of the Virginia Coastal Plain: U.S. Geological Survey Scientific Investigations Report 2025–5051, 45 p., https://doi.org/10.3133/sir20255051.

ISSN: 2328-0328 (online)

ISSN: 2328-031X (print)

Study Area

Table of Contents

  • 1. Introduction
  • 2. Distribution of Private-Domestic Wells Among Virginia Coastal Plain Aquifers
  • 3. Spatial Distribution of Self-Supplied Domestic Population Across the Virginia Coastal Plain
  • 4. Temporal Distribution of Self-Supplied Domestic Withdrawals in the Virginia Coastal Plain
  • 5. Estimated Self-Supplied Domestic Water Withdrawal in the Virginia Coastal Plain
  • 6. Summary
Publication type Report
Publication Subtype USGS Numbered Series
Title Estimated hydrogeologic, spatial, and temporal distribution of self-supplied domestic groundwater withdrawals for aquifers of the Virginia Coastal Plain
Series title Scientific Investigations Report
Series number 2025-5051
ISBN 978-1-4113-4609-3
DOI 10.3133/sir20255051
Publication Date June 17, 2025
Year Published 2025
Language English
Publisher U.S. Geological Survey
Publisher location Reston, VA
Contributing office(s) Virginia and West Virginia Water Science Center
Description Report: vii, 45 p.; Data release
Country United States
State Virginia
Other Geospatial Virginia Coastal Plain
Online Only (Y/N) N
Additional Online Files (Y/N) N
Additional publication details