Submarine groundwater discharge (SGD) may provide important chemical constituents to the ocean, but the dispersed nature of this process makes locating and quantifying its input extremely difficult. Since groundwater contains 3-4 orders of magnitude greater radon than seawater, Rn-222 may be a useful tracer of this process if all other sources of radon to bottom waters can be evaluated. We report development of a SGD tracing tool based on radon inventories in a coastal area of the northeastern Gulf of Mexico. We evaluated factors that influence the concentration of radon in the water column (i.e., production-decay, horizontal transport, and loss across the pycnocline) using a linked benthic exchange-horizontal transport model. Total Rn-222 benthic fluxes (greater than or equal to 2420 dpm m(-2) day(-1) measured with in situ chambers are of the magnitude required to support measured sub-pycnocline Rn-222 inventories, while estimates of molecular diffusion show that this input is relatively small (less than or equal to dpm m(-2) day(-1)). Using this model approach, together with measurements of the radon inventory, we estimated a regional subsurface fluid flow ranging from 180 to 710 m(3) sec(-1) into the 620 km(2) study area. This discharge, equivalent to an upward advective velocity of appoximately 2-10 cm day(-1) dispersed over this entire study area, is equivalent to approximately 20 first magnitude springs.