m (→E) |
m (→I) |
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*<span title="Infiltration basins, infiltration trenches, dry wells, and underground infiltration systems capture and temporarily store stormwater before allowing it to infiltrate into the soil. As the stormwater penetrates the underlying soil, chemical, biological and physical processes remove pollutants and delay peak stormwater flows."> [https://stormwater.pca.state.mn.us/index.php?title=Infiltration '''infiltration basin''']</span> | *<span title="Infiltration basins, infiltration trenches, dry wells, and underground infiltration systems capture and temporarily store stormwater before allowing it to infiltrate into the soil. As the stormwater penetrates the underlying soil, chemical, biological and physical processes remove pollutants and delay peak stormwater flows."> [https://stormwater.pca.state.mn.us/index.php?title=Infiltration '''infiltration basin''']</span> | ||
*<span title="The infiltration rate is the velocity or speed at which water enters into the soil"> '''infiltration rate'''</span> | *<span title="The infiltration rate is the velocity or speed at which water enters into the soil"> '''infiltration rate'''</span> | ||
− | *<span title="Influent typically refers to the water entering a stormwater | + | *<span title="Influent typically refers to the water entering a stormwater bmp. It refers to water that has not been treated by the device, though the water may have received treatment from an upstream bmp"> '''influent'''</span>. |
*<span title="Inlets collect excess stormwater from the street, transition the flow into storm drains, and can provide maintenance access to the storm drain system."> '''inlet structure'''</span> | *<span title="Inlets collect excess stormwater from the street, transition the flow into storm drains, and can provide maintenance access to the storm drain system."> '''inlet structure'''</span> | ||
*<span title="Land used primarily for religious, governmental, educational, social, cultural or major health care facilities (where they have beds for overnight stay). Examples include: schools, synagogues, cemeteries, hospitals, nursing homes, city halls, county and state fairgrounds, and museums."> '''institutional land use'''</span> | *<span title="Land used primarily for religious, governmental, educational, social, cultural or major health care facilities (where they have beds for overnight stay). Examples include: schools, synagogues, cemeteries, hospitals, nursing homes, city halls, county and state fairgrounds, and museums."> '''institutional land use'''</span> |
Hover boxes allow the user to hover over bolded text and see a definition for that text. If the bolded text is blue, there is a link to more information.
We have only begun to use them since June, 2019. When we modify older pages, we will incorporate hover boxes into updates.
This page lists standard definitions used in hover boxes throughout this manual. Hover your mouse over any bolded term and a definition will be displayed. This list will continue to expand as new terms are encountered. You'll note that some terms have not yet been defined (not bolded).