- abandoned water right
- a water right which was not put to
beneficial use for a number of years, generally five to
seven years.
-
- abandoned well
- a well which is no longer used. In
many places, abandoned wells must be filled with cement or
concrete grout to prevent pollution of ground water bodies.
-
- absorb
- to take in.
-
- accretion
- a gradual increase in land area
adjacent to a river.
-
- acid rain
- the acidic rainfall which results
when rain combines with sulfur oxides emissions from
combustion of fossil fuels.
- acre-foot
- the amount of water required to cover
one acre to a depth of one foot. An acre-foot equals 325,851
gallons, or 43,560 cubic feet. A flow of 1
cubic feet per second
produce 1.98 acre-feet per day.
- activated carbon adsorption
- the process of pollutants moving out
of water and attaching on to activated carbon.
- adhesion
- the molecular attraction asserted
between the surfaces of bodies in contact. Compare
cohesion.
- adjudication
- a court proceeding to determine all
rights to the use of water on a particular stream system or
ground water basin.
- adsorption
- the adhesion of a substance to the
surface of a solid or liquid. Adsorption is often used to
extract pollutants by causing them to be attached to such
adsorbents as activated carbon or silica gel. Hydrophobic,
or water-repulsing adsorbents, are used to extract oil from
waterways in oil spills.
- aeration
- In wastewater treatment processes, aeration introduces air
into the liquid, providing an aerobic environment for microbial
degradation of organic matter. The purpose of aeration is
two-fold: 1) to supply the required oxygen to the metabolizing
microorganisms and 2) to provide mixing so that the
microorganisms come into contact with the dissolved and
suspended organic matter.
- aggressive water
- water which is soft and acidic and
can corrode plumbing, piping, and appliances.
- alkalinity
- the measurement of constituents in a
water supply which determine alkaline conditions. The
alkalinity of water is a measure of its capacity to
neutralize acids. See
pH.
-
- algal bloom
- a phenomenon whereby excessive
nutrients within a river, stream or lake cause an explosion
of plant life which results in the depletion of the oxygen
in the water needed by fish and other aquatic life. Algae
bloom is usually the result of urban runoff (of lawn
fertilizers, etc.). The potential tragedy is that of a "fish
kill," where the stream life dies in one mass extinction.
- alluvium
- sediments deposited by erosional
processes, usually by streams.
- alvusion
- a sudden or perceptible change in a
river's margin, such as a change in course or loss of banks
due to flooding.
-
- annular space
- the space between two concentric
cylindrical objects, one of which surrounds the other, such
as the space between the walls of a drilled hole and a
casing.
- aquatic
- growing in, living in, or frequenting
water.
-
- aquiclude
- a formation which, although porous
and capable of absorbing water slowly, will not transmit
water fast enough to furnish an appreciable supply for a
well or a spring.
-
- alluvium
- sediments deposited by erosional
processes, usually by streams .
- aquiculture
- the raising or fattening of fish in
enclosed ponds. Compare
mariculture.
- aquifer
- a geologic formation that will yield
water to a well in sufficient quantities to make the
production of water from this formation feasible for
beneficial use; permeable layers of underground rock or sand
that hold or transmit groundwater below the water table.
- artesian
aquifer
- a geologic formation in which water
is under sufficient hydrostatic pressure to be discharged to
the surface without pumping.
- artesian well
- a water well drilled into a confined
aquifer where enough hydraulic pressure exists for the water
to flow to the surface without pumping.
- artesian zone
- a zone where water is confined in an
aquifer under pressure so that the water will rise in the
well casing or drilled hole above the bottom of the
confining layer overlying the aquifer.
- average annual
recharge
- amount of water entering the aquifer
on an average annual basis. Averages mean very little for
the Edwards because the climate of the region and structure
of the aquifer produce a situation in which the area is
usually water rich or water poor.
- backsiphonage
- reverse seepage of water in a
distribution system.
- backwashing
- reversing the flow of water through a
home treatment device filter or membrane to clean and remove
deposits.
- barrage
- any artificial obstruction placed in
water to increase water level or divert it. Usually the idea
is to control peak flow for later release.
- beneficial
use
- the amount of water necessary when
reasonable intelligence and diligence are used for a stated
purpose; Texas law recognizes the following uses as
beneficial: (1) domestic and municipal uses, (2) industrial
uses, (3) irrigation, (4) mining, (5) hydroelectric power,
(6) navigation, (7) recreation, (8) stock raising, (9)
public parks, and (10) game preserves.
- best management practices (BMP)
- schedules of activities, prohibitions of practices,
maintenance procedures, and other management practices to
prevent or reduce pollution.
- bioaccumulation
- uptake and retention of substances by
an organism from its surrounding medium (usually water) and
from food.
-
- biomonitoring
- a test used to evaluate the relative
potency of a chemical by comparing its effect on a living
organism with the effect of a standard population on the
same type of organism.
-
- bioremediation
a process that uses living
organisms to remove pollutants.
biosolids
a nutrient-rich organic material
resulting from the treatment of wastewater. Biosolids
contain nitrogen and phosphorus along with other
supplementary nutrients in smaller doses, such as potassium,
sulfur, magnesium, calcium, copper and zinc. Soil that is
lacking in these substances can be reclaimed with biosolids
use. The application of biosolids to land improves soil
properties and plant productivity, and reduces dependence on
inorganic fertilizers.
- biosphere
- the earth and all its ecosystems
- blackwater
- wastewater from toilet, latrine, and
agua privy flushing and sinks used for food preparation or
disposal of chemical or chemical-biological ingredients.
- blinds
- water samples containing a chemical
of known concentration given a fictitious company name and
slipped into the sample flow of the lab to test the
impartiality of the lab staff.
- blowdown
- the water drawn from boiler systems
and cold water basins of cooling towers to prevent the
buildup of solids.
-
- bog
- a type of wetland that accumulates
appreciable peat deposits. They depend primarily on
precipitation for their water source, and are usually acidic
and rich in plant matter with a conspicuous mat or living
green moss.
-
- boiling point
- the temperature at which a liquid
boils. It is the temperature at which the vapor pressure of
a liquid equals the pressure on its surface. If the pressure
of the liquid varies, the actual boiling point varies. For
water it is 212 degrees Fahrenheit or 100 degrees Celsius.
-
biochemical oxygen
demand (BOD)
- a measure
of the amount of oxygen required to neutralize organic
wastes.
- brine
- highly salty and heavily mineralized
water containing heavy metal and organic contaminants.
-
- buoyancy
- the tendency of a body to float or
rise when immersed in a fluid; the power of a fluid to exert
an upward force on a body placed in it.
- calcium
carbonate
- CACO3 - a white precipitate that
forms in water lines, water heaters and boilers in hard
water areas; also known as scale.
- calorie
- amount of energy required to raise
the temperature of 1 gram of water 1 degree Celsius.
- capillary
zone
- soil area above the water table where
water can rise up slightly through the cohesive force of
capillary action. See
phreatophytes.
- carbamates
- a class of new-age pesticides that
attack the nervous system of organisms.
- carbonates
- the collective term for the natural
inorganic chemical compounds related to carbon dioxide that
exist in natural waterways.
- casing
- a tubular structure intended to be
watertight installed in the excavated or drilled hole to
maintain the well opening and, along with cementing, to
confine the ground waters to their zones of origin and
prevent the entrance of surface pollutants.
-
- cavern
- a large underground opening in rock
(usually limestone) which occurred when some of the rock was
dissolved by water. In some igneous rocks, caverns can be
formed by large gas bubbles.
- cement grout
- a mixture of water and cement in the
ratio of not more than 5-6 gallons of water to a 94 pound
sack of portland cement which is fluid enough to be pumped
through a small diameter pipe.
- CERCLA
- Comprehensive Environment Response,
Compensation and Liability Act. Also known as SUPERFUND. The
Act gave EPA the authority to clean up abandoned, leaky
hazardous waste sites.
-
- certificate of water right
- an official document which serves as
court evidence of a perfected water right.
- CFU
- colony forming units.
-
- check dam
- a small dam constructed in a gully or
other small water course to decrease the stream flow
velocity, minimize channel erosion, promote deposition of
sediment and to divert water from a channel.
- chemical weathering
- attack and dissolving of parent rock
by exposure to rainwater, surface water, oxygen, and other
gases in the atmosphere, and compounds secreted by
organisms. Contrast
physical weathering.
- chlorination
- the adding of chlorine to water or
sewage for the purpose of disinfection or other biological
or chemical results.
- chlorine
demand
- the difference between the amount of
chlorine added to water, sewage, or industrial wastes and
the amount of residual chlorine remaining at the end of a
specific contact period. Compare
residual
chlorine.
-
- chute spillway
- the overall structure which allows
water to drop rapidly through an open channel without
causing erosion. Usually constructed near the edge of dams.
-
- circulate
- to move in a circle, circuit or
orbit; to flow without obstruction; to follow a course that
returns to the starting point.
- cistern
- a tank used to collect rainwater
runoff from the roof of a house or building.
-
- climatic cycle
- the periodic changes climate
displays, such as a series of dry years following a series
of years with heavy rainfall.
-
- climatic year
- a period used in meteorological
measurements. The climatic year in the U.S. begins on
October 1.
- climate
- generalized weather at a given place
on earth over a fairly long period; a long term average of
weather. Compare
weather.
-
- cloudburst
- a torrential downpour of rain, which
by it spottiness and relatively high intensity suggests the
bursting and discharge of water from a cloud all at once.
- coagulation
- in water treatment, the use of
chemicals to make suspended solids gather or group together
into small flocs.
- chemical oxygen
demand (COD)
- the
chemical oxygen demand (COD) is the amount of oxygen consumed to
completely chemically oxidise the organic water constituents to
inorganic end products.
-
- cohesion
- a molecular attraction by which the
particles of a body are united throughout the mass whether
like or unlike. Compare
adhesion.
- cold vapor
- method to test water for the presence
of mercury.
- coliform bacteria
- non-pathogenic microorganisms used in
testing water to indicate the presence of pathogenic
bacteria.
-
- collector well
- a well located near a surface water
supply used to lower the water table and thereby induce
infiltration of surface water through the bed of the water
body to the well..
- colloids
- finely divided solids which will not
settle but which may be removed by coagulation or
biochemical action.
-
- combined
sewer
- a sewer system that carries both
sanitary sewage and storm water runoff. When sewers are
constructed this way, wastewater treatment plants have to be
sized to deal with storm water flows and oftentimes some of
the water receives little or no treatment. Compare
separate sewer.
- completion
- sealing off access of undesirable
water to the well bore by proper casing and/or cementing
procedures.
- composite sample, weighted
- a sample composed of two or more
portions collected at specific times and added together in
volumes related to the flow at time of collection. Compare
grab sample.
- concentration
- amount of a chemical or pollutant in
a particular volume or weight of air, water, soil, or other
medium.
- condensation
- the change of state from a gas to a
liquid. Compare
evaporation,
sublimation.
-
- conduit
- a natural or artificial channel
through which fluids may be conveyed.
- cone of depression
- natural depression in the water table
around a well during pumping.
- confined aquifer
- an aquifer that lies between two
relatively impermeable rock layers.
- confining
bed or unit
- a body of impermeable or distinctly
less permeable material stratigraphically adjacent to one or
more aquifers.
- confluent growth
- in coli form testing, abundant or
overflowing bacterial growth which makes accurate
measurement difficult or impossible.
- conjunctive
management
- integrated management and use of two
or more water resources, such as an aquifer and a surface
water body.
-
- connate growth
- water trapped in the pore spaces of a
sedimentary rock at the time it was deposited. It is usually
highly mineralized.
-
- conservation
- to protect from loss and waste.
Conservation of water may mean to save or store water for
later use.
- consolidated formation
- naturally occurring geologic
formations that have been lithified (turned to stone). The
term is sometimes used interchangeably with the term
"bedrock." Commonly, these formations will stand at the
edges of a bore hole without caving.
- consumptive
use
- the quantity of water not available
for reuse. Evapotranspiration, evaporation, incorporation
into plant tissue, and infiltration into groundwater are
some of the reasons water may not be available for reuse.
Compare nonconsumptive use.
- contact
recreation
- activities involving a significant
risk of ingestion of water, such as wading by children,
swimming, water skiing, diving and surfing. Compare
noncontact
recreation..
- contamination
- the introduction into water of sewage
or other foreign matter that will render the water unfit for
its intended use.
- cooling tower
- large tower used to transfer the heat
in cooling water from a power or industrial plant to the
atmosphere either by direct evaporation or by convection and
conduction.
-
- correlative rights
- rights that are coequal or that
relate to one another, so that any one owner cannot take
more than his share.
-
- creek
- a small stream of water which serves
as the natural drainage course for a drainage basin. The
term is relative according to size. Some creeks in a humid
region would be called rivers if they occurred in an arid
area.
-
- crest
- the top of a dam, dike, or spillway,
which water must reach before passing over the structure;
the summit or highest point of a wave; the highest elevation
reached by flood waters flowing in a channel.
-
- critical
low flow
- low flow conditions below which some
standards do not apply. The impacts of permitted discharges
are analyzed at critical low-flow.
-
- cubic foot per
second (CFS)
- the rate of discharge representing a
volume of one cubic foot passing a given point during 1
second. This rate is equivalent to approximately 7.48
gallons per second, or 1.98
acre-feet
per day.
-
- current
- the portion of a stream or body of
water which is moving with a velocity much greater than the
average of the rest of the water. The progress of the water
is principally concentrated in the current. See
thalweg.
- dam
- a structure of earth, rock, or
concrete designed to form a basin and hold water back to
make a pond, lake, or reservoir.
-
- deionized water
- water free of inorganic chemicals.
-
- delta
- an alluvial deposit made of rock
particles (sediment, and debris) dropped by a stream as it
enters a body of water.
- demand
- the number of units of something that
will be purchased at various prices at a point in time.
Compare supply.
- dental fluorosis
- disorder caused by excessive
absorption of fluorine and characterized by brown staining
of teeth.
-
- deposit
- something dropped or left behind by
moving water, as sand or mud.
-
- desalination
- the process of salt removal from sea
or brackish water.
- detection limit
- the lowest level that can be
determined by a specific analytical procedure or test
method.
- diatomaceous
- consisting of or abounding in
diatoms, a class of unicellular or colonial algae having a
silicified cell wall that persists as a skeleton after
death.
- diluting water
- distilled water that has been
stabilized, buffered, and aerated. Used in the BOD test.
- discharge
- the volume of water that passes a
given point within a given period of time. It is an
all-inclusive outflow term, describing a variety of flows
such as from a pipe to a stream, or from a stream to a lake
or ocean.
-
- discharge
permit
- a permit issued by a state or the
federal government to discharge effluent into waters of the
state or the United States. In many states both State and
federal permits are required.
- disinfection
- the killing of the larger portion of
the harmful and objectionable bacteria in the sewage.
Usually accomplished by introduction of chlorine, but more
and more facilities are using exposure to ultraviolet
radiation, which renders the bacteria sterile.
- disinfection byproducts
- halogenated organic chemicals formed
when water is disinfected.
- dispersion
- the movement and spreading of
contaminants out and down in an aquifer.
- displacement
- distance by which portions of the
same geological layer are offset from each other by a fault.
-
- dissolve
- the process by which solid particles
mix molecule by molecule with a liquid and appear to become
part of the liquid.
- dissolved oxygen (DO)
- amount of oxygen gas dissolved in a
given quantity of water at a given temperature and
atmospheric pressure. It is usually expressed as a
concentration in parts per million or as a percentage of
saturation.
-
- dissolved solids
- inorganic material contained in water
or wastes. Excessive dissolved solids make water unsuitable
for drinking or industrial uses. See
TDS.
- distillation
- water treatment method where water is
boiled to steam and condensd in a separate reservoir.
Contaminants with higher boiling points than water do not
vaporize and remain in the boiling flask.
- distilled water
- water that has been treated by
boiling and condensation to remove solids, inorganics, and
some organic chemicals.
-
- diversion
- to remove water from a water body.
Diversions may be used to protect bottomland from hillside
runoff, divert water away from active gullies, or protect
buildings from runoff.
- drainage area
- of a stream at a specified location
is that area, measured in a horizontal plane, enclosed by a
topographic divide from which direct surface runoff from
precipitation normally drains by gravity into the stream
above the specified location.
- driller's well log
- a log kept at the time of drilling
showing the depth, thickness, character of the different
strata penetrated, location of water-bearing strata, depth,
size, and character of casing installed.
-
- dripstone
- deposits of calcium
carbonate that include stalactites, stalagmites, columns,
and cave pearls.
-
- drought
- although there is no universally
accepted definition of drought, it is generally the term
applied to periods of less than average precipitation over a
certain period of time. In south Texas ranchers say drought
begins as soon as it stops raining.
- duplicates
- two separate samples with separate
containers taken at the same time at the same place.
- ecosphere
- total of all the ecosystems on the
planet, along with their interactions; the sphere of air,
water, and land in which all life is found.
- Edwards Aquifer
- an arch-shaped belt of porous, water
bearing limestones composed of the Comanche Peak, Edwards,
and Georgetown formations trending from west to east to
northeast through Kinney, Uvalde, Medina, Bexar, Comal,
Hays, Travis, and Williamson counties.
- Edwards outcrop
- where the Edwards and associated
limestone formations are found at the surface. This area is
also referred to as the Recharge Zone.
-
- effective porosity
- the portion of pore space in
saturated permeable material where the movement of water
takes place.
-
- effective precipitation
- the part of precipitation which
produces runoff; a weighted average of current and
antecedent precipitation "effective" in correlating with
runoff. It is also that part of the precipitation falling on
an irrigated area which is effective in meeting the
requirements of consumptive use.
- effluent
- any substance, particularly a liquid,
that enters the environment from a point source. Generally
refers to wastewater from a sewage treatment or industrial
plant.
-
- electrodialysis
- a process which uses an electrical
current and an arrangement of permeable membranes to
separate soluble minerals from water. It is often used to
desalinate salt or brackish water.
- endangered species
- one having so few individual
survivors that the species could soon become extinct in all
or part of its region.
- enteric viruses
- a category of viruses related to
human excreta found in waterways.
- environment
- aggregate of external conditions that
influence the life of an individual organism or population.
- EPA
- Environmental Protection Agency
- epilimnion
- warm, less dense top layer in a
stratified lake. Compare
hypolimnion.
-
- erosion
- the wearing away of the land surface
by wind, water, ice or other geologic agents. Erosion occurs
naturally from weather or runoff but is often intensified by
human land use practices.
- escarpment
- the topographic expression of a
fault.
- estuarine waters
- deepwater tidal habitats and tidal
wetlands that are usually enclosed by land but have access
to the ocean and are at least occasionally diluted by
freshwater runoff from the land (such as bays, mouths of
rivers, salt marshes, lagoons).
- estuarine zone
- area near the coastline that consists
of estuaries and coastal saltwater wetlands.
- estuary
- thin zone along a coastline where
freshwater system(s) and river(s) meet and mix with a salty
ocean (such as a bay, mouth of a river, salt marsh, lagoon).
- euphotic zone
- surface layer of an ocean, lake, or
other body of water through which light can penetrate. Also
known as the zone of photosynthesis.
- eutrophic
- having a large or excessive supply of
plant nutrients (nitrates and phosphates). Compare
oligotrophic.
- eutrophication
(natural)
- an excess of plant nutrients from
natural erosion and runoff from the land in an aquatic
ecosystem supporting a large amount of aquatic life that can
deplete the oxygen supply.
- evaporation
- the change by which any substance is
converted from a liquid state and carried of in vapor.
Compare condensation,
sublimation.
- evapotranspiration
- combination of evaporation and
transpiration of water into the atmosphere from living
plants and soil. Distinguish
transpiration.
- external cost
- cost of production or consumption
that must be borne by society; not by the producer.
- extinction
- complete disappearance of a species
because of failure to adapt to environmental change.
- fat, oil and grease (FOG)
-
- fat, oil, and grease of animal or vegetable origin.
-
- fecal coli form
- the portion of the coli form bacteria
group which is present in the intestinal tracts and feces of
warm-blooded animals. A common pollutant in water.
-
- fen
- a type of wetland that accumulates
peat deposits, but not as much as a
bog. Fens
are less acidic than bogs, deriving most of their water from
groundwater rich in calcium and magnesium.
-
- fermentation, anaerobic
- process in which carbohydrates are
converted in the absence of oxygen to hydrocarbons (such as
methane).
- field capacity
- the amount of water held in soil
against the pull of gravity.
- filter
- a device used to remove solids from a
mixture or to separate materials. Materials are frequently
separated from water using filters.
-
- filtration
- the mechanical process which removes
particulate matter by separating water from solid material,
usually by passing it through sand.
-
- "first
in time, first in right"
- phrase indicating that older water
rights have priority over more recent rights if there is not
enough water to satisfy all rights.
-
- fixed ground water
- water held in saturated material that
it is not available as a source of water for pumping.
- flocculation
- large scale treatment process
involving gentle stirring whereby small particles in flocs
are collected into larger particles so their weight causes
them to settle to the bottom of the treatment tank.
-
- flood
- an overflow or inundation that comes
from a river or other body of water and causes or threatens
damage. It can be any relatively high stream flow overtopping
the natural or artificial banks in any reach of a stream. It
is also a relatively high flow as measured by either gage
height or discharge quantity.
- floodplain
- land next to a river that becomes
covered by water when the river overflows its banks .
- flora
- plant population of a region.
-
- flow
- the rate of water discharged from a
source expressed in volume with respect to time.
- flow
augmentation
- the addition of water to meet flow
needs.
-
- food-handling service establishment or restaurant (FSE)
- any business that handles, processes, and/or serves food.
- fog
- fat, oil, and grease of animal or vegetable origin
- forbay
- the water behind a dam.
-
- forfeited water right
- a water right canceled because of
several consecutive years of nonuse.
-
- free ground water
- water in interconnected pore spaces
in the zone of saturation down to the first impervious
barrier, moving under the control of the water table slope.
-
- freezing
- the change of a liquid into a solid
as temperature decreases. For water, the freezing point is
32 F or 0 C.
-
- fresh water
- water containing less than 1,000
parts per million (ppm) of dissolved solids of any type.
Compare saline
water.
-
- fresh salt water interface
- the region where fresh water and salt
water meet. In the Edwards region, it is commonly referred
to as the "bad water line", although it is zone and not a
line.
-
- frost
- a covering of minute ice crystals on
a cold surface.
- gaging station
- the site on a stream, lake or canal
where hydrologic data is collected.
-
- gallon
- A unit of volume. A U.S. gallon
contains 231 cubic inches, 0.133 cubic feet, or 3.785
liters. One U.S. gallon of water weighs 8.3 lbs.
-
- geohydrology
- a term which denotes the branch of
hydrology relating to subsurface or subterranean waters;
that is, to all waters below the surface.
-
- geologic erosion
- normal or natural erosion caused by
geological processes acting over long geologic periods and
resulting in the wearing away of mountains, the building up
of floodplains, coastal plains, etc.
-
- geopressured reservoir
- a geothermal reservoir consisting of
porous sands containing water or brine at high temperature
or pressure.
-
- geyser
- a periodic thermal spring that
results from the expansive force of super heated steam..
-
- glacier
- a huge mass of land ice that consists
of recrystallized snow and moves slowly down slope or
outward.
- grab sample
- a sample taken at a given place and
time. Compare
composite sample.
- granular activated carbon
- pure carbon heated to promote
"active" sites which can adsorb pollutants. Used in some
home water treatment systems to remove certain organic
chemicals and radon.
- grease blanket
- floating material (usually grease) found inside a grease
trap or interceptor.
- grease interceptor or interceptor
- a pretreatment device used to separate and retain FOG.
the interceptor is usually 500 gallons or greater in size,
exceeds 50 gallons per minute in capacity, usually located
outdoors, and offers longer retention times than a trap.
-
- grease trap or trap
- a pretreatment device used to separate and retain FOG. the
trap is usually less than 500 gallons in size, doesn't exceed 50
gallons per minute in capacity, and installed in the floor or
under the sink.
-
- grey water
- wastewater from clothes washing
machines, showers, bathtubs, hand washing, lavatories and
sinks that are not used for disposal of chemical or
chemical-biological ingredients.
- groundwater
- water within the earth that supplies
wells and springs; water in the zone of saturation where all
openings in rocks and soil are filled, the upper surface of
which forms the water table.
-
- groundwater hydrology
- the branch of hydrology that deals
with groundwater; its occurrence and movements, its
replenishment and depletion, the properties of rocks that
control groundwater movement and storage, and the methods of
investigation and utilization of ground water.
-
- groundwater law
- the common law doctrine of riparian
rights and the doctrine of prior appropriation as applied to
ground water.
-
- groundwater recharge
- the inflow to a ground water
reservoir.
-
- groundwater reservoir
- an aquifer or aquifer system in which
ground water is stored. The water may be placed in the
aquifer by artificial or natural means.
-
- groundwater runoff
- the portion of runoff which has
passed into the ground, has become ground water, and has
been discharged into a stream channel as spring or seepage
water.
-
- groundwater storage
- the storage of water in groundwater
reservoirs.
-
- gully
- a deeply eroded channel caused by the
concentrated flow of water.
-
- gully reclamation
- use of small dams of manure and
straw; earth, stone, or concrete to collect silt and
gradually fill in channels of eroded soil.
- hail
- a form of precipitation which forms
into balls or lumps of ice over 0.2 inch in diameter. Hail
is formed by alternate freezing and melting as precipitation
is carried up and down in highly turbulent air currents.
-
- hardpan
- a shallow layer of earth material
which has become relatively hard and impermeable, usually
through the deposition of minerals. In the Edwards region
hardpans of clay are common.
- hard water
- water containing a high level of
calcium, magnesium, and other minerals. Hard water reduces
the cleansing power of soap and produces scale in hot water
lines and appliances.
- hardness (water)
- condition caused by dissolved salts
of calcium, magnesium, and iron, such as bicarbonates,
carbonates, sulfates, chlorides, and nitrates.
- head
- the pressure of a fluid owing to its
elevation, usually expressed in feet of head or in pounds
per square inch, since a measure of fluid pressure is the
height of a fluid column above a given or known point.
-
- head gate
- the gate that controls water flow
into irrigation canals and ditches. A water master regulates
the head gates during water distribution and posts head gate
notices declaring official regulations.
- heat of vaporization
- the amount of heat necessary to
convert a liquid (water) into vapor.
- heavy water
- water in which all the hydrogen atoms
have been replaced by deuterium.
-
- holding pond
- a small basin or pond designed to
hold sediment laden or contaminated water until it can be
treated to meet water quality standards or be used in some
other way.
- hydroelectric plant
- electric power plant in which the
energy of falling water is used to spin a turbine generator
to produce electricity.
- hydrograph
- a chart that measures the amount of
water flowing past a point as a function of time.
- hydrologic cycle
- natural pathway water follows as it
changes between liquid, solid, and gaseous states;
biogeochemical cycle that moves and recycles water in
various forms through the ecosphere. Also called the water
cycle.
- hydrologic unit
- is a geographic area representing
part or all of a surface drainage basin or distinct
hydrologic feature.
-
- hydrometer
- an instrument used to measure the
density of a liquid.
- hydropower
- electrical energy produced by falling
water.
- hygroscopic nuclei
- piece of dust or other particle
around which water condenses in the atmosphere. These tiny
droplets then collide and coalesce, with as many as 10,000
nuclei contributing to formation of a raindrop.
- hydrosphere
- region that includes all the earth's
liquid water, frozen water, floating ice, frozen upper layer
of soil, and the small amounts of water vapor in the Earth's
atmosphere.
- hydrostatic head
- a measure of pressure at a given
point in a liquid in terms of the vertical height of a
column of the same liquid which would produce the same
pressure.
- hydrostatic pressure
- pressure exerted by or existing
within a liquid at rest with respect to adjacent bodies.
- hypolimnion
- bottom layer of cold water in a lake.
Compare epilimnion.
- ice
- a solid form of water.
- impermeable
- material that does not permit fluids
to pass through.
-
- impervious
- the quality or state of being
impermeable; resisting penetration by water or plant roots.
Impervious ground cover like concrete and asphalt affects
quantity and quality of
runoff.
-
- impoundment
- a body of water such as a pond,
confined by a dam, dike, floodgate or other barrier. It is
used to collect and store water for future use.
-
- inchoate water right
- an unperfected water right.
- indicator organisms
- microorganisms, such as coliforms,
whose presence is indicative of pollution or of more harmful
microorganism.
- indicator tests
- tests for a specific contaminant,
group of contaminants, or constituent which signals the
presence of something else (ex., coliforms indicate the
presence of pathogenic bacteria).
- inland freshwater wetlands
- swamps, marshes, and bogs found
inland beyond the coastal saltwater wetlands.
- instream use
- use of water that does not require
withdrawal or diversion from its natural watercourse; for
example, the use of water for navigation, recreation, and
support of fish and wildlife.
- interbasin transfer
- the physical transfer of water from
one watershed to another; regulated by the Texas Water Code.
- intermittent stream
- one that flows periodically. Compare
perennial
stream.
- interstate water
- according to law, interstate waters
are defined as (1) rivers, lakes and other waters that flow
across or form a part of state or international boundaries;
(2) waters of the Great Lakes; (3) coastal waters whose
scope has been defined to include ocean waters seaward to
the territorial limits and waters along the coastline
(including inland streams) influenced by the tide.
-
- interstices
- the void or empty portion of rock or
soil occupied by air or water.
-
- irrigation efficiency
- the percentage of water applied, and
which can be accounted for, in the soil moisture increase
for consumptive use.
-
- irrigation return flow
- water which is not consumptively used
by plants and returns to a surface or ground water supply.
Under conditions of water right litigation, the definition
may be restricted to measurable water returning to the
stream from which it was diverted.
-
- irrigation
water
- water which is applied to assist
crops in areas or during times where rainfall is inadequate.
- isotherm
- line that connects points of equal
temperature.
- isohyet
- line that connects points of equal
rainfall.
- jet stream
- a long narrow meandering current of
high-speed winds near the tropopause blowing from a
generally westerly direction and often exceeding a speed of
250 miles per hour.
- jetteau
- a jet of water.
- jetter
- one (as a geyser) that sends out a
jet.
- jetty
- a structure (as a pier or mole of
wood or stone) extending into a sea, lake, or river to
influence the current or tide or to protect a harbor.
- kalema
- a violent surf that occurs on the
coast of the Guinea region, West Africa.
- kame
- a short ridge, hill, or mound of
stratified drift deposited by glacial meltwater.
- kame terrace
- a terrace of stratified sand and and
gravel deposited by streams between a glacier and an
adjacent valley wall.
- laboratory water
- purified water used in the laboratory
as a basis for making up solutions or making dilutions.
Water devoid of interfering substances.
-
- lag time
- the time from the center of a unit
storm to the peak discharge or center of volume of the
corresponding unit hydrograph.
-
- lagoon
- a shallow pond where sunlight,
bacterial action, and oxygen work to purify wastewater.
Lagoons are typically used for the storage of wastewaters,
sludges, liquid wastes, or spent nuclear fuel.
-
- lake
- an inland body of water, usually
fresh water, formed by glaciers, river drainage etc. Usually
larger than a pool or pond.
- landscape impoundment
- body of reclaimed water which is used
for aesthetic enjoyment or which otherwise serves a function
not intended to include contact recreation.
- leachate
- water containing contaminants which
leaks from a disposal site such as a landfill or dump.
- leaching
- extraction or flushing out of
dissolved or suspended materials from the soil, solid waste,
or another medium by water or other liquids as they
percolate down through the medium to groundwater.
- lentic system
- a nonflowing or standing body of
fresh water, such as a lake or pond. Compare
lotic system.
- levee
- a natural or man-made earthen
obstruction along the edge of a stream, lake, or river.
Usually used to restrain the flow of water out of a river
bank.
- limestone
- rock that consists mainly of calcium
carbonate and is chiefly formed by accumulation of organic
remains.
- limiting factor
- factor such as temperature, light,
water, or a chemical that limits the existence, growth,
abundance, or distribution of an organism.
- limnology
- scientific study of physical,
chemical, and biological conditions in lakes, ponds, and
streams.
-
- liquid
- a state of matter, neither gas nor
solid, that flows and takes the shape of its container.
- littoral zone
- area on or near the shore of a body
of water.
- lotic system
- a flowing body of fresh water, such
as a river or stream. Compare
lentic system.
- mariculture
- cultivation of fish and shellfish in
estuarine and coastal areas.
Compare aquiculture.
-
- marsh
- an area periodically inundated and
treeless and often characterized by grasses, cattails, and
other monocotyledons
- MCL - Maximum Contaminant Level
- the maximum level of a contaminant
allowed in water by federal law. Based on health effects and
currently available treatment methods.
- median streamflow
- the rate of discharge of a stream for
which there are equal numbers of greater and lesser flow
occurrences during a specified period.
-
- melting
- the changing of a solid into a
liquid.
-
- meltwater
- water that comes from the melting ice
of a glacier or a snowbank.
-
- meteoric water
- new water derived from the
atmosphere.
-
mermaid
- a fabled marine creature usually
represented as having the head, trunk, and arms of a woman
and a lower part like the tail of a fish.
- method blank
- laboratory grade water taken through
the entire analytical procedure to determine if samples are
being accidentally contaminated by chemicals in the lab
- micrograms per liter
- Ug/L
- micrograms per liter of water. One
thousands micrograms per liter is equivalent to 1 milligram
per liter. This measure is equivalent to
parts per billion
(ppb)
-
- migration
- the movement of oil, gas,
contaminants, water, or other liquids through porous and
permeable rock.
- milligrams per liter
- mg/L
- milligrams per liter of water. This
measure is equivalent to
parts per million
(ppm).
-
- minimum stream flow
- the specific amount of water reserved
to support aquatic life, to minimize pollution, or for
recreation. It is subject to the priority system and does
not affect water rights established prior to its
institution.
-
- municipal sewage
- sewage from a community which may be
composed of domestic sewage, industrial wastes or both.
- natural flow
- the rate of water movement past a
specified point on a natural stream. The flow comes from a
drainage area in which there has been no stream diversion
caused by storage, import, export, return flow, or change in
consumptive use caused by man-controlled modifications to
land use. Natural flow rarely occurs in a developed country.
- natural
resource
- any form of matter or energy obtained
from the environment that meets human needs.
- NIPDWR
- National Interim Primary Drinking
Water Regulations.
-
- nitrogen
- a plant
nutrient
that can cause an overabundance of bacteria and algae when
high amounts are present, leading to a depletion of oxygen
and fish kills. Several forms occur in water, including
ammonia, nitrate, nitrite or elemental nitrogen. High levels
of nitrogen in water are usually caused by agricultural
runoff or improperly operating wastewater treatment plants.
Also see phosphorous.
- nonconsumptive use
- using water in a way that does not
reduce the supply. Examples include hunting, fishing,
boating, water-skiing, swimming, and some power production.
Compare consumptive use.
-
- noncontact
recreation
- recreational pursuits not involving a
significant risk of water ingestion, including fishing,
commercial and recreational boating, and limited body
contact incidental to shoreline activity. Compare
contact recreation.
-
- nonporous
- something which does not allow water
to pass through it. Compare
porous.
- nonpoint source
- source of pollution in which wastes
are not released at one specific, identifiable point but
from a number of points that are spread out and difficult to
identify and control. Compare
point source.
- nonpotable
- not suitable for drinking. Compare
potable.
- nonthreshold pollutant
- substance or condition harmful to a
particular organism at any level or concentration.
- NPDES permit
- permit issued under the National
Pollutant Discharge Elimination System for companies
discharging pollutants directly into the waters of the
United States.
- NTU
- nephlometric turbidity units.
-
- nutrient
- as a pollutant, any element or
compound, such as
phosphorous
or nitrogen,
that fuels abnormally high organic growth in aquatic
ecosystems. Also see
eutrophic.
- oligotrophic
- having a low supply of plant
nutrients. Compare
eutrophic.
- open system
- system in which energy and matter are
exchanged between the system and its environment, for
example, a living organism.
- organic chemicals
- chemicals containing carbon.
- orogeny
- period of mountain-building.
- orographic precipitation
- rainfall that occurs as a result of
warm, humid air being forced to rise by topographic features
such as mountains. Precipitation on the Edwards Plateau is
slightly higher because of the orographic effect of the
escarpment and hills.
- outcrop
- exposed at the surface. The Edwards
limestone outcrops in its recharge zone.
-
- outfall
- the place where a wastewater
treatment plant discharges treated water into the
environment.
-
- outwash
- a deposit of sand and gravel formed
by streams of melt water flowing from a glacier.
- oxygen demanding waste
- organic water pollutants that are
usually degraded by bacteria if there is sufficient
dissolved oxygen (DO) in the water.
- pathogen
- microorganisms which can cause
disease.
- peak flow
- in a wastewater treatment plant, the
highest flow expected to be encountered under any operational
conditions, including periods of high rainfall and prolonged
periods of wet weather.
- perched water table
- groundwater standing unprotected over
a confined zone.
-
- percolation
- the movement of water through the
subsurface soil layers, usually continuing downward to the
groundwater or water table reservoirs.
-
- percolating waters
- waters passing through the ground
beneath the Earth's surface without a definite channel.
-
- perfected water right
- a water right which indicates that
the uses anticipated by an applicant, and made under permit,
were made for beneficial use. Usually it is irrevocable
unless voluntarily canceled or forfeited due to several
consecutive years of nonuse.
- perennial
stream
- one that flows all year round.
Compare intermittent stream.
-
- permeability
- the ability of a water bearing
material to transmit water. It is measured by the quantity
of water passing through a unit cross section, in a unit
time, under 100 percent hydraulic gradient.
- pH
- numeric value that describes the
intensity of the acid or basic (alkaline) conditions of a
solution. The pH scale is from 0 to 14, with the neutral
point at 7.0. Values lower than 7 indicate the presence of
acids and greater than 7.0 the presence of alkalis (bases).
Technically speaking, pH is the logarithm of the reciprocal
(negative log) of the hydrogen ion concentration (hydrogen
ion activity) in moles per liter.
- phosphorous
- a plant
nutrient
that can cause an overabundance of bacteria and algae when
high amounts are present, leading to a depletion of oxygen
and fish kills. High levels of phosphorous in water are
usually caused by agricultural runoff or improperly
operating wastewater treatment plants. Also see
nitrogen.
- phreatophytes
- plants that send their roots into or
below the
capillary zone
to use ground water.
- physical weathering
- breaking down of parent rock into
bits and pieces by exposure to temperature and changes and
the physical action of moving ice and water, growing roots,
and human activities such as farming and construction.
Compare
chemical weathering.
- phytoplankton
- free-floating, mostly microscopic
aquatic plants.
- piezometroc surface
- the imaginary surface to which
groundwater rises under hydrostatic pressure in wells or
springs.
- plankton
- microscopic floating plant and animal
organisms of lakes, rivers, and oceans.
- plate
tectonics
- refers to the folding and faulting of
rock and flow of molten lava involving lithospheric plates
in the earth's crust and upper mantle.
- plug
- cement, grout, or other material used
to fill and seal a hole drilled for a water well.
- plume
- the area taken up by contaminant (s)
in an aquifer.
- pluvial
- pertaining to precipitation.
- point source
- source of pollution that involves
discharge of wastes from an identifiable point, such as a
smokestack or sewage treatment plant. Compare
nonpoint source.
- pollution
- undesireable change in the physical,
chemical, or biological characteristics of the air, water,
or land that can harmfully affect the health, survival, or
activities of human or other living organisms.
includes, but not limited to, solid waste, oil, grease, sewage,
garbage, sewage sludge, agricultural or industrial waste and the
characteristics of wastewater (i.e. pH, temperature, TSS,
turbidity, color, BOD, COD toxicity, and odor).
-
- pond
- a body of water usually smaller than
a lake and larger than a pool either naturally or
artificially confined.
- porous
- something which allows water to pass
through it. Compare
nonporous.
- potable
- suitable, safe, or prepared for
drinking. Compare
non-potable.
- ppb - parts per
billion
- number of parts of a chemical found
in one billion parts of a solid, liquid, or gaseous mixture.
Equivalent to micrograms per liter (Ug/L).
- ppm - parts per
million
- number of parts of a chemical found
in one million parts of a solid, liquid, or gaseous mixture.
Equivalent to milligrams per liter (mg/L).
- precipitate
- a solid which has come out of an
aqueous solution. (ex., iron from groundwater precipitates
to a rust colored solid when exposed to air).
- preservative
- a chemical added to a water sample to
keep it stable and prevent compounds in it from changing to
other forms or to prevent microorganism densities from
changing prior to analysis.
- price at equilibrium
- where supply and demand curves
intersect. The price at equilibrium is what allocates
resources.
- primary
treatment
- mechanical treatment in which large
solids are screened out and suspended solids in the sewage
settle out as sludge. Compare
secondary
treatment,
tertiary
treatment.
-
- priority date
- the date of establishment of a water
right. It is determined by adjudication of rights
established before the passage of the Water Code. The rights
established by application have the application date as the
date of priority.
- profundal zone
- a lake's deep-water region that is
not penetrated by sunlight.
-
- puddle
- a small pool of water, usually a few
inches in depth and from several inches to several feet in
its greatest dimension.
-
- pump
- a device which moves, compresses, or
alters the pressure of a fluid, such as water or air, being
conveyed through a natural or artificial channel.
-
- pumped hydroelectric storage
- storing water for future use in
generating electricity. Excess electrical energy produced
during a period of low demand is used to pump water up to a
reservoir. When demand is high, the water is released to
operate a hydroelectric generator.
- purge
- to force a gas through a water sample
to liberate volatile chemicals or other gases from the water
so their level can be measured.
- purgeable organics
- volatile organic chemicals which can
be forced out of the water sample with relative ease through
purging.
- quarry water
- the moisture content of freshly
quarried stone, esp. if porous.
- quicksilver water
- a solution of mercury nitrate used in
gilding.
- quick water
- the part of a stream that has a
strong current; an artificial current or bubbling patch of
water just astern of a moving boat.
- rain
- water drops which fall to the earth
from the air.
-
- rain gage
- any instrument used for recording and
measuring time, distribution, and the amount of rainfall.
- RCRA
- Resource Conservation and Recovery
Act - federal legislation requiring that hazardous waste be
tracked from "cradle" (generation) to "grave" (disposal).
-
- receiving waters
- a river, ocean, stream, or other
watercourse into which wastewater or treated effluent is
discharged.
- recharge
- refers to water entering an
underground aquifer through faults, fractures, or direct
absorption.
- recharge zone
- the area where a formation allows
available water to enter the aquifer. Generally, that area
where the Edwards Aquifer and associated limestones crop out
in Kinney, Uvalde, Medina, Bexar, Comal, Hays, Travis, and
Williamson counties and the outcrops of other formations in
proximity to the Edwards limestone, where faulting and
fracturing may allow recharge of the surface waters to the
Edwards Aquifer.
- reclaimed water
- domestic wastewater that is under the
direct control of a treatment plant owner/operator which has
been treated to a quality suitable for a beneficial use.
- recurrence interval
- average amount of time between events
of a given magnitude. For example, there is a 1% chance that
a 100-year flood will occur in any given year.
- reserves
- amount of a particular resource in
known locations that can be extracted at a profit with
present technology and prices.
-
- reservoir
- a pond, lake, tank, or basin (natural
or human made) where water is collected and used for
storage. Large bodies of groundwater are called groundwater
reservoirs; water behind a dam is also called a reservoir of
water.
- residual chlorine
- the available chlorine which remains
in solution after the demand has been satisfied. Compare
chlorine
demand.
- reverse osmosis
- a water treatment method whereby
water is forced through a semipermeable membrane which
filters out impurities.
- right of
free capture
- the idea that the water under a
person's land belongs to that person and they are free to
capture and use as much as they want. Also called the "law
of the biggest pump".
- riparian water right
- the legal right held by an owner of
land contiguous to or bordering on a natural stream or lake,
to take water from the source for use on the contiguous
land.
-
- riparian zone
- a stream and all the vegetation on
its banks.
-
- river
- a natural stream of water of
considerable volume.
-
- river basin
- the area drained by a river and its
tributaries.
- runoff
- surface water entering rivers,
freshwater lakes, or reservoirs.
- saline water
- water containing more than 1,000
parts per million (ppm) of dissolved solids of any type.
Compare fresh
water.
- salinity
- amount of dissolved salts in a given
volume of water.
- sanitary landfill
- landfill that is lined with
plastic or concrete or located in clay-rich soils to prevent
hazardous substances from leaking into the environment.
-
- saturation
- the condition of a liquid when it has
taken into solution the maximum possible quantity of a given
substance at a given temperature and pressure.
- seal
- the impermeable material, such as
cement grout bentonite, or puddling clay placed in the
annular space between the borehole wall and the casing of a
water well to prevent the downhole movement of surface water
or the vertical mixing of artestian waters.
- secondary treatment
- second step in most waste treatment
systems, in which bacteria break down the organic parts of
sewage wastes; usually accomplished by bringing the sewage
and bacteria together in trickling filters or in the
activated sludge process. Compare primary treatment,
tertiary treatment. Compare
primary
treatment,
tertiary
treatment.
- sediment
- soil particles, sand, and minerals
washed from the land into aquatic systems as a result of
natural and human activities.
- sedimentary cycle
- biogeochemical cycle in which
materials primarily are moved from land to sea and back
again.
- sedimentation
- a large scale water treatment process
where heavy solids settle out to the bottom of the treatment
tank after flocculation.
- seep
- a spot where water contained in the
ground oozes slowly to the surface and often forms a pool; a
small spring.
-
- separate
sewer
- a sewer system that carries only
sanitary sewage, not storm water runoff. When a sewer is
constructed this way, wastewater treatment plants can be
sized to treat sanitary wastes only and all of the water
entering the plant receives complete treatment at all times.
Compare combined sewer.
- septic tank
- underground receptacle for wastewater
from a home. The bacteria in the sewage decompose the organic
wastes, and the sludge settles to the bottom of the tank.
The effluent flows out of the tank into the ground through
drains.
- settleable solids
- in sewage, suspended solids that will
settle when the sewage is brought to a quiet state for a
reasonable length of time, usually two hours.
-
- siltation
- the deposition of finely divided soil
and rock particles upon the bottom of stream and river beds
and reservoirs.
-
- sleet
- precipitation which is a mixture of
rain and ice.
- slickensides
- a smooth striated polished surface
produced on rock by movement along a fault.
- sludge
- solid matter that settles to the
bottom of sedimentation tanks in a sewage treatment plant
and must be disposed of by digestion or other methods or
recycled to the land.
-
- sludge judge
- a clear, usually plastic, device used to collect samples
from a volume of water. the device is intended to measure
the relative volumes of floating material, settled solids,
and water in the trap.
-
- snow
- precipitation in the form of branched
hexagonal crystals, often mixed with simple ice crystals,
which fall more or less continuously from a solid cloud
sheet. These crystals may fall either separately or in
cohesive clusters forming snowflakes.
- solute
- any substance derived from the
atmosphere, vegetation, soil, or rock that is dissolved in
water.
- soil erosion
- the processes by which soil is
removed from one place by forces such as wind, water, waves,
glaciers, and construction activity and eventually deposited
at some new place.
- specific conductance
- a measure of the ability of a water
to conduct an electrical current. Specific conductance is
related to the type and concentration of ions in solution
and can be used for approximating the dissolved solids
concentration in water. In general, for the San Antonio
River basin, conductivity * .6 approximates TDS. People
monitoring water quality can measure electrical conductivity
quickly in the field and estimate TDS without doing any lab
tests at all. See TDS.
- specific heat
- the amount of heat required to raise
the temperature of a kilogram of a substance (water) by 1
degree Celsius.
-
- spillway
- the channel or passageway around or
over a dam through which excess water is diverted.
- spray irrigation
- application of finely divided water
droplets to crops using artificial means.
- spring
- an issue of water from the earth; a
natural fountain; a source of a body or reservoir of water.
- standard solution
- any solution in which the
concentration is known.
- storm water discharge
- precipitation that does not
infiltrate into the ground or evaporate due to impervious
land surfaces but instead flows onto adjacent land or water
areas and is routed into drain/sewer systems.
-
- stream
- a general term for a body of flowing
water.
- stream segment
- refers to the surface waters of an
approved planning area exhibiting common biological,
chemical, hydrological, natural, and physical
characteristics and processes. Segments will normally
exhibit common reactions to external stress such as
discharge or pollutants.
- stream flow
- the discharge that occurs in a
natural channel.
- sublimation
- the transition of water directly from
the solid state to the gaseous state, without passing
through the liquid state; or vice versa. Compare
condensation,
evaporation.
- subsidence
- sinking down of part of the earth's
crust due to underground excavation, such as removal
groundwater.
- supply
- a schedule that shows the various
quantities of things offered for sale at various prices at a
point in time. Compare
demand.
- surface impoundment
- an indented area in the land's
surface, such a pit, pond, or lagoon.
- surface irrigation
- application of water by means other
than spraying such that contact between the edible portion
of any food crop and the irrigation water is prevented.
- surface water
- water that flows in streams and
rivers and in natural lakes, in wetlands, and in reservoirs
constructed by humans.
- sustainable
management
- method of exploiting a resource that
can be carried on indefinitely. Removal of water from an
aquifer in excess of recharge is, in the long term, not a
sustainable management method.
- sustained overdraft
- long term withdrawal from the aquifer
of more water than is being recharged.
- technology-based treatment
requirements
- NPDES permit requirements based on
the application of pollution treatment or control
technologies including BTP (best practicable technology),
BCT (best conventional technology), BAT (best available
technology economically achievable), and NSPS (new source
performance standards).
- tertiary treatment
- removal from wastewater of traces or
organic chemicals and dissolved solids that remain after
primary treatment and
secondary
treatment.
- thalweg
- the line of maximum depth in a
stream. The thalweg is the part that has the maximum
velocity and causes cutbanks and channel migration.
- thermal gradient
- temperature difference between two
areas.
- thermal pollution
- an increase in air or water
temperature that disturbs the climate or ecology of an area.
- thermocline
- fairly thin zone in a lake that
separates an upper warmer zone (epilimnion) from a lower
colder zone (hypolimnion).
- threshold pollutant
- substance that is harmful to a
particular organism only above a certain concentration, or
threshold level.
- TDS - total
dissolved solids
- the sum or all inorganic and organic
particulate material. TDS is an indicator test used for
wastewater analysis and is also a measure of the mineral
content of bottled water and groundwater. There is a
relationship between TDS and conductivity. In general, for
the San Antonio River basin, TDS/.6 approximates
conductivity. Or, conductivity * .6 approximates TDS. People
monitoring water quality can measure electrical conductivity
quickly in the field and estimate TDS without doing any lab
tests at all. See
specific conductance.
- Toxicity Reduction Evaluation
(TRE)
- a study conducted to determine the
source(s) of toxicity in a discharge effluent so that these
sources can be controlled sufficiently to allow a discharger
to comply with their permit limits.
- toxicity test
- the means to determine the toxicity
of a chemical or an effluent using living organisms. A
toxicity test measures the degree of response of an exposed
test organism to a specified chemical or effluent.
- Tragedy of the Commons
- the idea that no one takes
responsibility for things that everybody owns.
- transmissivity
- refers to the rate at which limestone
allows the transmission of water. Limestone can be highly
porous, but not very transmissive if the pores are not
connected to each other. Technically speaking, it is the
rate at which water is transmitted through a unit width of
aquifer under unit hydraulic gradient. Transmissivity is
directly proportional to aquifer thickness, thus it is high
where the Edwards is thick and low where it is thin, given
the same hydraulic conductivity.
- transpiration
- direct transfer of water from the
leaves of living plants to the atmosphere. Distinguish
evapotranspiration.
-
- tributary
- a stream that contributes its water
to another stream or body of water.
-
-
total suspended solids (TSS)
- a measure of the suspended
solids in wastewater, effluent, or water bodies, determined by tests
for total suspended nonfilterable solids. Suspended solids are particles of
soil, sediment, living material, or dead organisms suspended in water.
-
- turbid
- thick or opaque with matter in
suspension. Rivers and lakes may become turbid after a
rainfall.
-
- troposphere
- the layer of atmosphere closest to
the Earth, extending seven to ten miles above the surface,
containing most of the clouds and moisture.
- USGS
- United States Geological Survey
-
- unclassified waters
- those waters for which no
classification has been assigned and which have not been
identified in Appendix A of 31 Texas Administrative Code,
Chapter 307.10 of Title 31 (relating to definitions).
- unconsolidated formations
- naturally occurring earth formations
that have not been lithified. Alluvium, soil, gravel, clay,
and overburden are some of the terms used to describe this
type of formation.
- undercurrent
- a current below the upper currents or
surface of a fluid body.
- underdrain
- a concealed drain with openings
through which the water enters when the water table reaches
the level of the drain.
- underflow
- movement of water through subsurface
material.
- undertow
- the current beneath the surface that
sets seaward or along the beach when waves are breaking on
the shore.
- underwater
- under the surface of the water;
lying, growing, performed, worn, or operating below the
surface of the water, as underwater caverns, underwater
operation of a submarine.
- upflow
- an upward flow.
- vested water right
- the right granted by a state water
agency to use either surface or ground water.
-
- virgin flow
- the stream flow which exists or would
exist if man had not modified the conditions on or along the
stream or in the drainage basin.
- void
- the pore space or other openings in
rock. The openings can be very small to cave size and are
filled with water below the water table.
- wastewater
- water containing waste including
greywater, blackwater or water contaminated by waste
contact, including process-generated and contaminated
rainfall runoff.
-
- water
- the liquid that descends from the
clouds as rain; forms streams, lakes, and seas, and is a
major constituent of all living matter. It is an odorless,
tasteless, colorless, very slightly compressible liquid.
-
- water cycle
- natural pathway water follows as it
changes between liquid, solid, and gaseous states;
biogeochemical cycle that moves and recycles water in
various forms through the ecosphere. Also called the
hydrologic cycle.
- water pollution
- degradation of a body of water by a
substance or condition to such a degree that the water fails
to meet specified standards or cannot be used for a specific
purpose.
- water quality-based toxics
control
- an integrated strategy used in NPDES
permitting to assess and control the discharge of toxic
pollutants to surface waters. There are two approaches: the
whole-effluent approach involves the use of toxicity tests
to measure discharge toxicity; the chemical specific
approach involves the use of water quality criteria or State
standards to limit specific toxic pollutants directly.
- water quality criteria
- scientifically derived ambient limits
developed and updated by EPA, under section 304(a)(1) of the
Clean Water Act, for specific pollutants of concern.
Criteria are recommended concentrations, levels, or
narrative statements that should not be exceeded in a
water body in order to protect aquatic life or human health.
- water quality standards
- laws or regulations, promulgated
under Section 303 of the Clean Water Act, that consist of
the designated use or uses of a water body or a segment of a
water body and the water quality criteria that are necessary
to protect the use or uses of that particular water body.
Water quality standards also contain an antidegradation
statement. Every State is required to develop water quality
criteria standards applicable to the various water bodies
within the State and revise them every 3 years.
- water table
- level below the earth's surface at
which the ground becomes saturated with water. The surface
of an unconfined aquifer which fluctuates due to seasonal
precipitation.
- water table aquifer
- an aquifer confined only by
atmospheric pressure (water levels will not rise in the well
above the confining bed).
- water well
- any artificial excavation constructed
for the purpose of exploring for or producing ground water.
-
- water year
- The 12-month period, usually October
1 through September 30. The water year is designated by the
calendar year in which it ends and which includes 9 of the
12 months. Thus, the year ending September 30, 1998 is
called the1998 Water Year.
- waterfall
- A sudden, nearly vertical drop in a
stream, as it flows over rock.
- waterlogging
- saturation of soil with irrigation
water so the water table rises close to the surface.
-
- watermaster
- An employee of a water department who
distributes available water supply at the request of water
right holders and collects hydrographic data.
- watershed
- land area from which water drains
toward a common watercourse in a natural basin.
- weather
- day to day variation in atmospheric
conditions. Compare
climate.
- wetland
- area that is regularly wet or flooded
and has a water table that stands at or above the land
surface for at least part of the year, such as a
bog,
pond,
fen,
estuary,
or marsh.
- whole-effluent toxicity
- the aggregate toxic effect of an
effluent measured directly by a toxicity test.
- xeriscape
- creative landscaping for water and
energy efficiency and lower maintenance. The seven xeriscape
principles are: good planning and design; practical lawn
areas; efficient irrigation; soil improvement; use of
mulches; low water demand plants; good maintenance.
- yield
- the quantity of water expressed
either as a continuous rate of flow (cubic feet per second,
etc.) or as a volume per unit of time. It can be collected
for a given use, or uses, from surface or groundwater
sources on a watershed.
- zone of aeration
- a region in the Earth above the water
table. Water in the zone of aeration is under atmospheric
pressure and will not flow into a well.
-
- zone of saturation
- the space below the water table in
which all the interstices (pore spaces) are filled with
water. Water in the zone of saturation is called
groundwater.
-
- zooplankton
- tiny aquatic animals eaten by fish.
|