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m (→G) |
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<dl> | <dl> | ||
− | <dt> | + | <dt>Geomorphology</dt> <dd>The study of the form and development of the landscape.</dd> |
− | <dt> | + | <dt>Gleyed </dt><dd> A blue–gray, sticky, compacted soil, usually indicative of saturated conditions.</dd> |
− | <dt> | + | <dt>Global warming </dt><dd> The progressive gradual rise of the Earth’s surface temperature thought to be caused by the greenhouse effect, which may be responsible for changes in global climate patterns.</dd> |
− | <dt> | + | <dt>Grade breaks </dt><dd> Point where the ground slope changes.</dd> |
− | <dt> | + | <dt>Grass channels </dt><dd> A natural open channel conveyance system which is preferable to curb and gutter where development density, soils, and slopes permit.</dd> |
− | <dt> | + | <dt>Green infrastructure </dt><dd>A wide array of practices at multiple scales that manage wet weather and that maintains or restores natural hydrology by infiltrating, evapotranspiring, or harvesting and using stormwater. On a regional scale, green infrastructure is the preservation or restoration of natural landscape features, such as forests, floodplains and wetlands, coupled with policies such as infill and redevelopment that reduce overall imperviousness in a watershed. On the local scale, green infrastructure consists of site and and neighborhood-specific practices, such as bioretention, trees, green roofs, permeable pavements and cisterns.</dd> |
− | <dt> | + | <dt>Green roof </dt><dd> A rooftop treatment practice where a thin planting media is established on roof surfaces and then planted with hardy, low–growing vegetation</dd> |
− | <dt> | + | <dt>Groundwater </dt><dd> Water occupying the sub–surface saturated zone.</dd> |
− | <dt> | + | <dt>Groundwater mounding </dt><dd> The localized rise in water table or potentiometric surface caused by the addition or injection of water.</dd> |
− | <dt> | + | <dt>Gully erosion </dt><dd> The widening, deepening and head cutting of small channels and waterways (rills) due to erosion by water or snowmelt, typified by channels one foot or more deep.</dd> |
</dl> | </dl> | ||