m
m
Line 109: Line 109:
 
*<span title="characterized by, relating to, or requiring a moderate amount of moisture a mesic habitat"> '''mesic'''</span>
 
*<span title="characterized by, relating to, or requiring a moderate amount of moisture a mesic habitat"> '''mesic'''</span>
 
*moderate to steep slopes
 
*moderate to steep slopes
 +
*<span title="A municipal separate storm sewer system (MS4) is a means of transportation, individually or in a system, (e.g. roads with drainage systems, municipal streets, catch basins, curbs, gutters, ditches, man-made channels, storm drains, etc.) that are: owned or operated by a public entity (e.g. cities, townships, counties, military bases, hospitals, prison complexes, highway departments, universities, etc.) with jurisdiction over disposal of sewage, industrial wastes, stormwater, or other wastes. This includes special districts under State law (sewer, flood control, or drainage districts, etc.), an authorized Indian tribal organization, or a designated and approved management agency under section 208 of the Clean Water Act; designed or used for collecting or transporting stormwater; not a combined sewer; and not part of a publicly owned treatment works."> '''MS4'''</span> (Municipal Separate Storm Sewer System)
 
*<span title="Mulch products are intended to reduce raindrop (splash) erosion, decrease sheet erosion, promote rain/snowmelt infiltration, increase soil moisture retention, regulate soil temperature, and in most cases, improve soil texture and increase organic matter. Mulch products include natural materials such as straw and other grasses, coconut fiber, and bark."> '''mulching'''</span>
 
*<span title="Mulch products are intended to reduce raindrop (splash) erosion, decrease sheet erosion, promote rain/snowmelt infiltration, increase soil moisture retention, regulate soil temperature, and in most cases, improve soil texture and increase organic matter. Mulch products include natural materials such as straw and other grasses, coconut fiber, and bark."> '''mulching'''</span>
  

Revision as of 13:32, 29 May 2019

This page lists standard definitions used in hover boxes throughout this manual. Hover boxes allow the user to hover over bolded text and see a definition for that text.

A

  • arterial roads
  • alum

B

  • baffle
  • bank stabilization
  • best management practice
  • biofiltration
  • bioinfiltration
  • bioretention practice
  • Bioswale
  • Brushing
  • buffer zones.
  • bypass flow

C

  • clay
  • coagulation
  • coarse sediment
  • collector roadway
  • concentrated flow
  • concentrated stormwater runoff
  • conventional roof
  • curb-cut
  • curb bump-out

D

E

F

  • filter fabric
  • filter strip
  • flash
  • flocculant
  • flocculation
  • flow paths
  • fluvial systems
  • footprint
  • forebay
  • fractured flow

G

  • grade
  • grade control structures
  • green roof
  • green space
  • geotextile

H

  • herbaceous perennial
  • highly urban and ultra-urban environments
  • hydraulic conductivity of the aquifer material (k),
  • hydraulic grade line
  • hydraulic gradient (i),
  • hydraulic model
  • hydrodynamic separator
  • hydrogeology

I

J

K

L

  • large lot residential
  • level spreader
  • live storage
  • longitudinal slope
  • low permeability soils

M

  • media
  • mesic
  • moderate to steep slopes
  • MS4 (Municipal Separate Storm Sewer System)
  • mulching

N

O

P

  • perimeter control
  • permanent cover
  • permanent stormwater management
  • plugs
  • point of discharge
  • polymer
  • porosity (f)
  • Portland cement concrete
  • Prairie du Chien formation,
  • Prescribed burning
  • pretreatment
  • proprietary structures

Q

R

  • riprap
  • riprap
  • rock armored
  • rock riffle

S

T

  • travel time
  • treatment train
  • turbid
  • two-stage channel

U

  • highly urban and ultra-urban environments
  • underdrain

V

W

X

Y

Z