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Flood, levee, and erosion control glossary - W

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Wale

Structural element of a bulkhead, fixed horizontally between the vertical piles on the seaward side and the sheet piles on the landward side.

Warm season turfgrass

Species of turfgrass such as bermudagrass, St. Augustine, zoysia, and buffalograss used in the southern U.S.

Washover

deposited inland of a beach by overwash process.

Wasted

Excess soil deposits resulting from construction.

Wastewater

The used water and solids from a community (including used water from industrial processes) that flow to a treatment plant. Storm water, surface water, and groundwater infiltration also may be included in the wastewater that enters a wastewater treatment plant. The term sewage usually refers to household wastes, but this word is being replaced by the term wastewater.

Water Bars

Water diversion structure.

Water bar erosion control - photo.
Photo courtesy of USDA NRCS.

Example of water bar erosion control.

Water Budget

The depth of annual precipitation to cover an area. In the U.S. it is 30 inches.

Water Clarity

Measurement of how far you can see through the water. The greater the water clarity, the further you can see through the water. The clarity of estuarine water is determined by a measure of the attenuation of sunlight through the water column.

Water Column

A hypothetical "cylinder" of water from the surface of a water body to the bottom and within which physical and chemical properties can be measured.

Water Erosion

Removal of soil particles by water; the three types are sheet erosion, rill erosion, and gully erosion.

Water Erosion - photo
Photo courtesy of OSU.

Photo of Water Erosion.

Water Quality Criteria

Levels of water quality expected to render a body of water suitable for its designated use. Criteria are based on specific levels of pollutants that would make the water harmful if used for drinking, swimming, farming, fish production, or industrial processes.

Water Resources Values

Floodplain values including those related to natural storage and conveyance of flood waters, the maintenance of water quality, and the recharge of groundwater.

Water Solubility

The maximum possible concentration of a chemical compound dissolved in water. If a substance is water-soluble it can very readily disperse through the environment.

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Water Table

The topmost layer of an unconfined aquifer. Water tables can be above ground, barely below the surface, or hundreds of feet underground.

Water Table Aquifer

An aquifer whose upper boundary is the water table; also known as an unconfined aquifer.

Watercourse

Any natural or man-made depression with a bed and well-defined banks below the surrounding land serving to give direction to a current of water or pattern of runoff from a drainage area of any size.

Waters of the United States

Currently defined by regulation to include all navigable and interstate waters, their tributaries and adjacent wetlands, as well as isolated wetlands and lakes and intermittent streams.

Watershed

A geographic area from which water is drained by a river and its tributaries to a common outlet. A ridge or drainage divide separates a watershed from adjacent watersheds. An area confined by drainage divides usually having only one streamflow outlet. In the UK the term "watershed" refers to what in the US is called the drainage divide, and the term "catchment" refers to what in the US is called a watershed. The land area that drains into a stream; the watershed for a major river may encompass a number of smaller watersheds that ultimately combine at a common point. See Drainage Area.

Watershed lake - photo
Photo courtesy of USDA NRCS.

Photo of a watershed lake.

Watershed Approach

A coordinated framework for environmental management that focuses public and private efforts on the highest priority problems within hydrologically-defined geographic areas taking into consideration both ground and surface water flow.

Watershed Area

A topographic area within a line drawn connecting the highest points uphill of a drinking water intake into which overland flow drains.

Watershed area

All land and water within the confines of a drainage divide, or a water problem area consisting in whole or in part of land needing drainage.

Wattles

Live branch cuttings, usually willows, bound together into long bundles; also live fascines.

Wattling

Use of wattles to stabilize slopes and streambanks.

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Wave Crest Elevation

The height, measured above NGVD, of wave crests in the coastal floodplain during a coastal storm, including the height of wind-generated waves as well as the effects of the tide and surge.

Wave Energy

The capacity of waves to do work. The energy of a wave system is theoretically proportional to the square of the wave height, and the actual height of the waves (being a relatively easily measured parameter) is a useful index to wave energy; a high-energy coast is characterized by breaker heights greater than 50 cm and a low-energy coast is characterized by breaker heights less than 10 cm. Most of the wave energy along equilibrium beaches is used in shoaling and in sand movement.

Wave Fetch

The area in which seas are generated by a wind having a rather constant direction and speed. Fetch is the distance over which the wind blows. The further the wind blows the longer each individual wave is under its influence and, therefore, the more energy a wave can absorb from the wind.

Wave Fetch Window

The open-water area offshore from the shoreunit over which waves can be generated by winds; the larger the fetch window, the greater the wave exposure.

Wave Run-Up

The action of a wave after it breaks and the water "runs up" the shoreline or other obstacle, flooding areas reached by the storm surge itself.

Wave Set-Up

The super-elevation of the water surface over normal surge elevation due to onshore mass transport of the water by wave action alone.

Weed

An undesired uncultivated plant.

Weephole

Opening left in a revetment or bulkhead to allow groundwater drainage.

Weir

A fence or wattle placed in a stream to catch or retain fish. A dam placed across a river or canal to raise or divert the water, as for a millrace, or to regulate or measure the flow.

Weir - photo.
Photo courtesy of USDA NRCS.

Photo of a weir.

Wet Pond

A facility that treats stormwater for water quality by utilizing a permanent pool of water to remove conventional pollutants from runoff through sedimentation, biological uptake, and plant filtration.

Wet Vaults/Tanks

Underground storage facilities that treat stormwater for water quality through the use of a permanent pool of water that acts as a settling basin.

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Wetland

An area that is regularly saturated by surface or ground water and, under normal circumstances, capable of supporting vegetation typically adapted for life in saturated soil conditions. Wetlands are critical to sustaining many species of fish and wildlife. Wetlands generally include swamps, marshes, and bogs. Wetlands may be either coastal or inland.

Wetland - photo

Photo of Wetland.

Wetland Evaluation Technique

A technique used by the Corps of Engineers, the Federal Highway Administration, and the Environmental Protection Agency to rapidly assess wetland functions and values.

Wetlands

Those areas that are inundated by surface or groundwater with a frequency sufficient to support and, under normal circumstances, does or would support a prevalence of vegetative or aquatic life that requires saturated or seasonally saturated soil conditions for growth and reproduction. Wetlands generally include bottomland hardwoods, swamps, marshes, bogs, and similar areas such as sloughs, potholes, wet meadows, river overflows, mud flats, and natural ponds.

Wetlands - photo
Photo courtesy of USDA NRCS.

Photo of wetlands.

Wind Erosion

Removal of soil particles by wind, causing dryness and deterioration of soil structure; occurs most frequently in flat, dry areas covered by sands and loamy soils.

Wind Setup

The vertical rise in the stillwater level on the leeward side of a body of water caused by wind stresses acting on the surface of the water.

Wind erosion - photo
Photo courtesy of USDA NRCS.

Example of wind erosion.

Wingwall

The end portion of a bulkhead, sea wall, or revetment that cuts back in toward the bank, usually at a right angle to the main structure, to help retard or prevent flanking.

Withdrawal

Water withdrawal from the surface and ground water sources for various human uses.

Write-Your-Own Program

An effort to involve private insurance companies in the National Flood Insurance Program, and consisting of a policy sales and servicing mechanism by which insurance agents can sell flood insurance policies through individual property and casualty insurance companies.

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For more information about Infrastructure Defense Technologies’ flood barriers and erosion control barriers and applications, please call us at 1-800-379-1822, email us at info@metalithH2O.com, info@infrastructure-defense.com or fill out our contact form.

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Phone: 1-800-621-5617 • Fax: 1-815-323-1317
Email: info@MetalithH2O.com

 


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