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<dt>Animal waste management </dt><dd> Practices and procedures which prevent the movement of animal wastes or byproducts from feeding or holding areas into the wider environment.</dd> | <dt>Animal waste management </dt><dd> Practices and procedures which prevent the movement of animal wastes or byproducts from feeding or holding areas into the wider environment.</dd> | ||
<dt>Annual load</dt><dd> Quantity of pollutants, sediment, or nutrients carried by a water body over the period of a year.</dd> | <dt>Annual load</dt><dd> Quantity of pollutants, sediment, or nutrients carried by a water body over the period of a year.</dd> | ||
− | <dt>Antecedent soil moisture</dt><dd> The water content held by a soil before a storm event. This has an effect on the amount of water that will | + | <dt>Antecedent soil moisture</dt><dd> The water content held by a soil before a storm event. This has an effect on the amount of water that will run off from the location of direct precipitation due to that event.</dd> |
<dt>Applicable [http://stormwater.pca.state.mn.us/index.php/Overview_of_TMDLs Wasteload Allocation] (WLA)</dt><dd> A Wasteload Allocation assigned to the permittee and approved by the USEPA.</dd> | <dt>Applicable [http://stormwater.pca.state.mn.us/index.php/Overview_of_TMDLs Wasteload Allocation] (WLA)</dt><dd> A Wasteload Allocation assigned to the permittee and approved by the USEPA.</dd> | ||
<dt>Aquifer</dt><dd> A body of permeable rock that can contain or transmit groundwater.</dd> | <dt>Aquifer</dt><dd> A body of permeable rock that can contain or transmit groundwater.</dd> | ||
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==F== | ==F== | ||
<dl> | <dl> | ||
− | <dt> | + | <dt>Fen </dt> <dd> A peat accumulating wetland that receives some drainage from surrounding mineral soils and usually supports marsh–like vegetation. Richer in nutrients and less acidic than bogs due to ground water inflows.</dd> |
− | <dt> | + | <dt>Ferrocyanide</dt> <dd>An anti–caking additive to road salt; when converted to its free cyanide form (FCN) becomes extremely toxic to aquatic life.</dd> |
− | <dt> | + | <dt>Field capacity </dt> <dd> Is the bulk water content retained in soil at −33 J/kg (or −0.33 bar) of hydraulic head or suction pressure. This is often assumed to be the soil water content at which excess water has drained away and the rate of downward movement has materially decreased.</dd> |
− | <dt> | + | <dt>Filter bed </dt> <dd> A sand or gravel bottomed treatment used to filter stormwater.</dd> |
− | <dt> | + | <dt>Filtration </dt> <dd> A series of processes that physically removes particles from water.</dd> |
− | <dt> | + | <dt>First flush </dt> <dd> The majority of pollutants carried in urban runoff are carried in the first ½” of runoff from a site.</dd> |
− | <dt> | + | <dt>Floodplain </dt> <dd> Land adjacent to a waterbody which is inundated when the discharge exceeds the conveyance capacity of the normal channel. Often defined in a regulatory sense as the extent of the 100–year flood.</dd> |
− | <dt> | + | <dt>Flow control</dt> <dd> Controlling the rate and volume of water leaving a site.</dd> |
− | <dt> | + | <dt>Forebay </dt> <dd> An extra storage space or small basin located near the inlet to settle out incoming sediments before water moves on into a pond or detention area.</dd> |
− | <dt> | + | <dt>Freeze–thaw cycle </dt> <dd> The alternation between freezing and thawing in the snowpack. This cycle changes the composition and characteristics of the snowpack and can effect its pollutant carrying ability and the amount of runoff generated.</dd> |
− | <dt> | + | <dt>Frequency curve </dt> <dd> A derivative of the probability curve that expresses the relation between the frequency distribution plot, with the magnitude of the variables on one axis and the number of occurrences of each magnitude in a given period as the other.</dd> |
− | <dt> | + | <dt>Frost heave </dt> <dd> A phenomenon in cold areas in which water that is trapped in soil or cracks in rocks alternately freezes and thaws. This causes the water to expand and contract which can cause significant movement and upheaval of the soil or rock.</dd> |
− | <dt> | + | <dt>Functional components approach </dt> <dd> An approach where basic BMP components are selected and pieced together to achieve a desired outcome.</dd> |
</dl> | </dl> | ||
==G== | ==G== | ||
<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> | ||
==H== | ==H== | ||
<dl> | <dl> | ||
− | <dt> | + | <dt>Head </dt><dd> The difference in elevation between two points in a body of water and the resulting pressure of the fluid at the lower point. </dd> |
− | <dt>HEC–1 </dt><dd> | + | <dt>HEC–1 </dt><dd> A rainfall–runoff model developed by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.</dd> |
− | <dt>HEC–2 </dt><dd> | + | <dt>HEC–2 </dt><dd> A rainfall–runoff model developed by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to compute steady–state water surface elevation profiles in natural and constructed channels.</dd> |
− | <dt> | + | <dt>High density residential </dt><dd> A high concentration of housing units in a specific area or on a specific property, typical of urban areas.</dd> |
− | <dt> | + | <dt>Hotspot </dt><dd> Point source potential pollution generating land uses such as gas stations, chemical storage facilities, industrial facilities, etc. </dd> |
− | <dt> | + | <dt>Housekeeping (BMP) </dt><dd> Any of a number of BMPs designed to keep pollutants from entering the waste stream by maintaining clean conditions, including street sweeping, litter pick–up and animal clean–up.</dd> |
− | <dt> | + | <dt>Hybrid rule </dt><dd> Current MPCA water quality volume criteria in the General Permit, so called due to encompassing four different rules depending on the type of BMP used and whether the receiving water is indicated as a Special Water.</dd> |
− | <dt>HydroCAD </dt><dd> | + | <dt>HydroCAD </dt><dd> A computer aided design program for modeling the hydrology and hydraulics of stormwater runoff.</dd> |
− | <dt> | + | <dt>Hydrograph </dt><dd> Graphical representation of stage or discharge at a point in a drainage as a function of time.</dd> |
− | <dt>[[Design infiltration rates| | + | <dt>[[Design infiltration rates|Hydrologic soils groups]] </dt><dd> A NRCS designation to give different soil types to reflect their relative surface permeability and infiltrative capability. Rankings for from high infiltration rates in Group A to very low infiltration rates in Group D.</dd> |
− | <dt> | + | <dt>Hydrology </dt><dd> The science dealing with the properties, distribution, and circulation of water hydroperiod the length of time an area is inundated or saturated by water.</dd> |
</dl> | </dl> | ||
==I== | ==I== | ||
<dl> | <dl> | ||
− | <dt> | + | <dt>Impaired waters </dt><dd> Streams or lakes that do not meet their designated uses because of excess pollutants or identified stressors</dd> |
− | <dt> | + | <dt>Impervious surface </dt><dd> Means a constructed hard surface that either prevents or retards the entry of water into the soil and causes water to run off the surface in greater quantities and at an increased rate of flow than prior to development. Examples include rooftops, sidewalks, patios, driveways, parking lots, storage areas, and concrete, asphalt, or gravel roads</dd> |
− | <dt>Impervious surface ('''MIDS definition''') </dt><dd> | + | <dt>Impervious surface ('''MIDS definition''') </dt><dd> A surface that impedes the infiltration of rainfall and results in an increased volume of surface runoff (see also [[Glossary#I|the definition in the glossary]] of this manual).</dd> |
− | <dt> | + | <dt>Infiltration </dt><dd> flow of water from the land surface into the subsurface (see [[Design infiltration rates]])</dd> |
− | <dt> | + | <dt>Individual permit </dt><dd> necessary if activities are not covered under one of the state’s general permit provisions</dd> |
− | <dt> | + | <dt>Industrial materials or activities </dt><dd> include but are not limited to material handling equipment or activities, industrial machinery, raw materials, intermediate products, by-products, final products, or waste products.</dd> |
− | <dt> | + | <dt>Inlet protection </dt><dd> preservation of the integrity and protection from the erosion of the area where water enters into a treatment area usually by vegetation or armoring.</dd> |
− | <dt> | + | <dt>Intensity–duration–frequency curves (IDF) </dt><dd> graphical representation of the intensity, duration, and frequency of a differing rainfalls over time.</dd> |
− | <dt> | + | <dt>Intensive green roof </dt><dd> rooftop systems including earth-bermed structures which ar reliant on rich, deep substrates and may include shrubs or trees.</dd> |
− | <dt> | + | <dt>Interflow </dt><dd> water that travels laterally or horizontally through the aeration zone during or immediately after a precipitation event and discharges into a stream or other body of water.</dd> |
− | <dt> | + | <dt>Interstitial water </dt><dd> water in the pore spaces of soil or rock.</dd> |
− | <dt> | + | <dt>Ion exchange </dt><dd> an exchange of ions between two electrolytes or between an electrolyte solution and a complex.</dd> |
− | <dt> | + | <dt>Isopluvial </dt><dd> line on a map along which an equal percentage of the total annual precipitation falls in a given season or month.</dd> |
<dt>Issue Paper </dt><dd> one in a series of nine decision papers on key topics developed by CWP and EOR during production of the manual.</dd> | <dt>Issue Paper </dt><dd> one in a series of nine decision papers on key topics developed by CWP and EOR during production of the manual.</dd> | ||
</dl> | </dl> |
This page was last edited on 11 July 2024, at 18:53.