Basin Facts

An old aquaduct crossing the Monocacy River
Burnside Bridge over Antietam Creek

The Potomac Basin stretches across parts of four states (Maryland, Pennsylvania, Virginia and West Virginia) as well as the District of Columbia. This area is also called the Potomac Watershed. It includes all of the land area where water drains towards the mouth of the Potomac - the point where the river spills into the Chesapeake Bay. The land of the Potomac Basin varies a great deal from its sources to its mouth, and so do its people. It is difficult to fully describe the Potomac and its people because of their variety and because they are both constantly changing. With that in mind, here is a current snapshot of the Basin's land, its people and its water.

Land:

The drainage area of the Potomac includes 14,670 square miles in four states: Virginia (5,723 sq. mi.), Maryland (3,818 sq. mi.), West Virginia (3,490 sq. mi.), Pennsylvania (1,570 sq. mi.), and the District of Columbia (69 sq. mi.). The basin's total area varies depending on map projection used.

The Basin lies in five geological provinces: the Appalachian Plateau, the Ridge and Valley, Blue Ridge, Piedmont Plateau, and Coastal Plain.

The Potomac meanders over 383 miles from Fairfax Stone, West Virginia to Point Lookout, Maryland. The river's distance will vary with map projection and location of measuring tool in the river (ie. middle of river, Maryland shoreline, Virginia shoreline).

The majority of the Basin's land area is covered by forests at 57.6% of the land area. Developed land makes up 4.8% percent of the Basin's land area, while agriculture cover 31.8%. Water and wetlands make up five percent of the Basin's land area.

The Potomac's major tributaries include: the Anacostia River, Antietam Creek, the Cacapon River, Catoctin Creek, Conocoheague Creek, the Monocacy River, the North Branch, the South Branch, the Occoquan River, the Savage River, the Senaca Creek, and the Shenandoah River. For maps of these watersheds, click here.

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People:

The population of the Basin is approximately 5.35 million (2000 Census). The population has increased by almost nine percent over the past decade.

The following information is based on 2000 Census data.

Jurisdiction
Population in the basin by jurisdiction
Population density per square mile
Virginia
2.3 million

403
Maryland
2 million
533
West Virginia
212,000
60
Pennsylvania
180,000
114
Washington, D.C.
572,000

8,290

The national average population density is 84 people per square mile and in the late 1500s the average population density was 2.2 people per square mile.

People living in urban areas account for the lion's share of the Basin's residents at almost 81 percent of the population. Those living in rural areas make up 18.6 percent of the population, while those living on farms account for .7 percent.

The Washington Metropolitan Area has approximately 3.7 million residents or almost three-quarters of the basin's population.

Major cities in the Potomac Basin include: Bethesda, Cumberland, Hagerstown, Frederick and Rockville in Maryland, Chambersburg and Gettysburg in Pennsylvania, Alexandria, Arlington, Harrisonburg, and Front Royal in Virginia, Harper's Ferry, Charles Town, and Martinsburg in West Virginia, and the largest city in the basin, Washington, D.C.

The Basin's major industries include: agriculture and forestry throughout the basin, coal mining and pulp and paper production along the North Branch; chemical production and agriculture in the Shenandoah Valley; high-tech, service, and light industry, as well as military and government installations in the Washington Metropolitan Area; and fishing in the Lower Potomac Estuary.

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Water:

The largest flow ever recorded on the Potomac at Washington, D.C. was 275 billion gallons per day in March 1936. The lowest flow ever recorded at the same location was 388 million gallons per day in September 1966. The average flow at this location is about 7 billion gallons per day. These figures are all before water supply withdrawals.

An average of approximately 486 million gallons of water is withdrawn daily in the Washington area for water supply. Approximately 100 million gallons per day of ground water used in rural areas.

Almost 86 percent of the Basin's population receives its drinking water from public water suppliers while thirteen percent uses well water.

Public water treatment plants treat approximately 83 percent of the Basin's waste water. Another sixteen percent is treated by private septic systems.

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