Drainage Glossary of Terms
100-year Flood. A flood stage that, statistically
has a 1% probability of occurring in any given year.
Abutment. The sloping sides of valley that
supports the ends of a dam.
Aggregate. (1) The sand and gravel portion
of concrete (65 to 75% by volume), the rest being cement and
water. (2) That which is installed for the purpose of changing
drainage characteristics.
Alluvium. A general term for all detrital
material deposited or in transit by streams, including gravel,
sand, silt, clay, and all variations and mixtures of these.
Apron. A pad of non-erosive material designed
to prevent scour holes developing at the outlet ends of culverts,
outlet pipes, grade stabilization structures, and other water
control devices.
Aquifer. An underground porous, water-bearing
geological formation.
Backwater. The rise in water surface elevation caused by
some obstruction such as a narrow bridge opening, buildings
or fill material that limits the area through which the water
shall flow.
Base Flood Elevation (BFE). The water surface
elevation corresponding to a flood having a one percent probability
of being equaled or exceeded in a given year.
Base Flow. Stream discharge derived from
groundwater sources as differentiated from surface runoff.
Benchmark. A marked point of known elevation
from which other elevations may be established.
Berm. A narrow shelf or flat area that breaks
the contiguity of a slope.
Best Management Practices (BMP). Design,
construction, and maintenance practices and criteria for stormwater
facilities that minimize the impact of stormwater runoff rates
and volumes, prevent erosion, and capture pollutants.
Capacity of a Storm Drainage Facility. The
maximum flow that can be conveyed or stored by a storm drainage
facility without causing damage to public or private property.
Catch Basin. A chamber usually built at
the curb line of a street for the admission of surface water
to a storm sewer of sub-drain, having at its base a sediment
sump designed to retain grit and detritus below the point
of overflow.
Chicken Wire. A woven wire fabric with an
opening size of about 1½ inches.
Chute or Rock Chute. A high velocity, open
channel (lined with rip-rap) for conveying water down a steep
slope without erosion.
Combined Sewer. A sewerage system that carries
both sanitary sewage and stormwater runoff.
Contour. An imaginary line on the surface
of the earth connecting points of the same elevation.
Contour Line. Line on a map which represents
a contour or points of equal elevation.
County Surveyor. A constitutional officer
of the county, elected to a 4-year term from the county at
large. Primary duties of the surveyor includes maintaining
annexation descriptions, legal survey book, and section corner
record book. The surveyor is also an ex-officio member of
the County Drainage Board and the technical authority on the
construction, reconstruction, and maintenance of all regulated
drains or proposed regulated drains in the county. Other major
responsibilities of the surveyor includes administering filter
strip programs, membership in the County Plan Commission,
and certification to the Indiana Alcoholic Beverage Commission.
Cross-Section. A graph or plot of ground
elevation across a stream valley or a portion of it, usually
along a line perpendicular to the stream or direction of flow.
Culvert. A closed conduit used for the conveyance
of surface drainage water under a roadway, railroad, canal,
or other impediment.
Cut-and-Fill. The process of earth grading
by excavating part of a higher area and using the excavated
material for fill to raise the surface of an adjacent lower
area.
Design Life. The period of time for which
a facility is expected to perform its intended function.
Design Standards. Detailed engineering drawings
and/or specifications promulgated by public or private organizations
that leave little choice to design engineers and technicians
(e.g. manhole, catch-basin, and inlet standards).
Design Storm. An selected storm event, described
in terms of the probability of occurring once within a given
number of years, for which drainage or flood control improvements
are designed and built.
Detention. Managing stormwater runoff by
temporary holding and controlled release.
Dike. An embankment to confine or control
water. Often built along the banks of a river to prevent overflow
of lowlands: a levee.
Discharge. Usually the rate of water flow.
A volume of fluid passing a point per unit time commonly expressed
as cubic feet per second, cubic meters per second, gallons
per minute, or millions of gallons per day.
Ditch. A man-made, open drainage-way in
or into which excess surface water or groundwater drained
from land, stormwater runoff, or floodwaters flow either continuously
or intermittentlyDrain. A buried slotted or perforated pipe
or other conduit (subsurface drain) or a ditch (open drain)
for carrying off surplus groundwater or surface water.
Drainage. The removal of excess surface
water or groundwater from land by means of ditches, or subsurface
drains.Drainage Area. The area draining into a stream at a
given point. It may be of different sizes for surface runoff,
subsurface flow and base flow, but generally the surface runoff
area is considered as the drainage area.
Drainage Board. A board consisting of three
to five persons including the county executive (commissioners)
or members appointed by the executive body (at least one of
the Board members must be a county executive). The County
Surveyor serves on the Board as an ex-officio, non-voting
member. The Board is responsible for adopting drain classifications
and a long-range plan, and for making decisions regarding
the design, construction, reconstruction, and/or maintenance
of regulated drains in the county.
Drainage Improvement. An activity within
or adjacent to a natural stream or a man-made drain primarily
intended to improve the flow capacity, drainage, erosion and
sedimentation control, or stability of the drainage-way.
Drainage Shed. See Drainage Area.
Drainage-way. A natural or artificial stream,
closed conduit, or depression that carries surface water.
This term is usually applied to all types of drains and watercourses,
whether man-made or natural.
Dredging. A method for deepening streams,
lakes, or reservoirs by scraping and removing solids from
the bottom.
Erosion. The wearing away of the land surface
by water, wind, ice, gravity, or other geological agents.
Excess Rainfall. The amount of rainfall
that runs directly off an area.
Farm or Field Tile. A small diameter clay
pipe installed in an agricultural area to allow drainage or
farmland.
Filter Strip. Usually a long, relatively
narrow area (usually 20-75 feet wide) of undisturbed or planted
vegetation used to retard or collect sediment for the protection
of watercourses, reservoirs, or adjacent properties.
Flap-gate. A device that allows liquids
to flow in only one direction in a pipe. Backflow preventers
are used on outlet pipes to prevent a reverse flow during
flooding situations.
Floodplain. Land immediately adjoining a
stream which is inundated when the discharge exceeds the conveyance
of the normal channel. The channel proper and the areas adjoining
the channel which have been or hereafter may be covered by
the regulatory or 100-year flood. Any normally dry land area
that is susceptible to being inundated by water from any natural
source. The floodplain includes both the floodway and the
floodway fringe districts.
Floodway. The channel of a river or stream
and those portions of the flood plains adjoining the channel
which are reasonably required to efficiently carry and discharge
the peak flow of the regulatory flood of any river or stream.
Flume. A constructed channel lined with
erosion-resistant materials used to convey water on the steep
grades without erosion.
Foundation Drain. A pipe or series of pipes
that collects groundwater from the foundation or footing of
structures to improve stability.
Gabion. A wire mesh cage, usually rectangular,
filled with rock and used to protect channel banks and other
sloping areas form erosion.
Gradation. The distribution of the various
sized particles that constitute a sediment, soil, or other
material, such as rip-rap.
Grade. (1) The slope of a road, a channel,
or natural ground. (2) The finished surface of a canal bed,
roadbed, top of embankment, or bottom of excavation; any surface
prepared to a design elevation for the support of construction,
such as paving or the laying of a conduit. (3) to finish the
surface of a canal bed, roadbed, top of embankment, or bottom
of excavation, or other land area to a smooth, even condition.
Gradient. (1) A change of elevation, velocity,
pressure, or other characteristics per unit length. (2) Slope.
Headwater. (1) The source of a stream. (2)
The water upstream from a structure or point on a stream.
Hydrograph. A graph showing for a given
point on a stream the discharge, stage (depth), velocity,
or other property of water with respect to time.
Impervious. Not allowing infiltration.
Infiltration. Passage or movement of water
into the soil.
Intermittent Stream. A stream that ceases
to flow in very dry periods.
Invert. The inside bottom of a culvert or
other conduit.
Land Surveyor. A person licensed under the
laws of the State of Indiana to practice land surveying.
Land Use Controls. Methods of regulating
the uses to which a given land area may be put, including
such things as zoning, subdivision regulation, and floodplain
regulation.
Non-point Source Pollution. Pollution that
enters a water body from diffuse origins on the watershed
and does not result from discernable, confined, or discrete
conveyances.
Open Drain. A natural watercourse or constructed
open channel that conveys drainage water.
Out-fall. The point, location, or structure
where wastewater or drainage discharges from a pipe or open
drain to a receiving body of water.
Outlet. The point of water disposal from
a stream, river, lake, tidewater, or artificial drain.
Outlet Channel. A waterway constructed or
altered primarily to carry water from man-made structures,
such as smaller channels, tile lines, and diversions.
Peak Discharge. The maximum instantaneous
flow from a given storm condition at a specific location.
Percolation. The movement of water through
soil.
Percolation Rate. The rate, usually expressed
as inches per hour or inches per day, at which water moves
through soil.
Perennial Stream. A stream that maintains
water in its channel throughout the year.
pH. A numerical measure of hydrogen ion
activity, the neutral point being 7.0. All pH values below
7.0 are acid, and all above 7.0 are alkaline.
Point Source Pollution. Any discernable,
confined, and discrete conveyance including but not limited
to any pipe, ditch, channel, tunnel, conduit, well, discrete
fissure, container, rolling stock, concentrated animal feeding
operation, or vessel or other floating craft, from which pollutants
are or may be discharged.
Private Drain. A drain that: (1) Is located
on land owned by one person or by two or more persons jointly;
and (2) Was not established under or made subject to any drainage
statute.
Professional Engineer. A person licensed
under the laws of the State of Indiana to practice professional
engineering.
PVC Pipe. Polyvinyl Chloride Pipe.
Receiving Stream. The body of water into
which runoff or effluent is discharged.
Regulated Drain. A drain, either open channel
or closed tile/sewer, subject to the provisions of the Indiana
Drainage code, I.C.-36-9-27.
Reservoir. A natural or artificially created
pond, lake or other space used for storage, regulation or
control of water. May be permanent or temporary.
Retention. The storage of stormwater to
prevent it from leaving the development site. May be permanent
or temporary.
Retention Facility. A facility designed
to completely retain a specified amount of stormwater runoff
without release except by means of evaporation, infiltration
or pumping.
Rill. A small intermittent watercourse with
steep sides, usually only a few inches deep.
Riparian. Of, on, or pertaining to the banks
of a stream, river, or pond.
Riparian Rights. A principle of common law
requiring that any user of waters adjoining or flowing through
his lands must use and protect them in a manner that will
enable his neighbor to utilize the same waters undiminished
in quantity and undefiled in quality.
Riprap. Broken rock, cobble, or boulders
placed on earth surfaces, such as the face of a dam or the
bank of a stream, for protection against the action of water
(waves).
Riser. The inlet portions of a drop inlet
spillway that extend vertically from the pipe conduit barrel
to the water surface.Runoff. That portion of precipitation
that flows from a drainage area on the land surface, in open
channels, or stormwater conveyance systems.
Saturation. In soils, the point at which
a soil or aquifer will no longer absorb any amount of water
without losing an equal amount.
Sediment. Solid material (both mineral and
organic) that is in suspension, is being transported, or has
been moved from its site of origin by air, water, gravity,
or ice and has come to rest on the earth’s surface.
Sedimentation. The process that deposits
soils, debris and other materials either on the ground surfaces
or in bodies of water or watercourses.Silt. (1) Soil fraction
consisting of particles between 0.002 an 0.05 mm in diameter.
(2) A soil textural class indicating more than 80% silt.
Silt Fence. A fence constructed of wood
or steel supports and either natural (e.g. burlap) or synthetic
fabric stretched across area of non-concentrated flow during
site development to trap and retain on-site sediment due to
rainfall runoff.
Stormwater Runoff. The water derived from
rains falling within a tributary basin, flowing over the surface
of the ground or collected in channels or conduits.
Storm Sewer. A sewer that carries stormwater,
surface drainage, street wash, and other wash waters but excludes
sewage and industrial wastes. Also called storm drain.
Subsurface Drain (SSD). A pervious backfield
trench, usually containing stone and perforated pipe, for
intercepting groundwater or seepage.
Surface Runoff. Precipitation that flows
onto the surfaces of roofs, streets, the ground, etc., and
is not absorbed or retained by that surface but collects and
runs off.
Swale. An elongated depression in the land surface
that is at least seasonally wet, is usually heavily vegetated,
and is normally without flowing water. Swales conduct stormwater
into primary drainage channels and may provide some groundwater
recharge.
Tailwater. The water surface elevation at
the downstream side of a hydraulic structure (i.e. culvert,
bridge).
Tile Drain. Pipe made of perforated plastic,
burned clay, concrete, or similar material, laid to a designed
grade and depth, to collect and carry excess water from the
soil.
Tile Drainage. Land drainage by means of
a series of tile lines laid at a specified depth, grade, and
spacing.
Toe of Slope. The base or bottom of a slope
at the point where the ground surface abruptly changes to
a significantly flatter grade.
Top of Casting. The top elevation of a casting or lid on a manhole or inlet.
Topographic Map. Graphical portrayal of
the topographic featured of a land area, showing both the
horizontal distances between the features and their elevations
above a given datum.
Topography. The representation of a portion
of the earth’s surface showing natural and man-made
features of a give locality such as rivers, streams, ditches,
lakes, roads, buildings and most importantly, variations in
ground elevations for the terrain of the area.
Trash Rack. A structural device used to
prevent debris from entering a pipe spillway or other hydraulic
structure.Underdrain. A small diameter perforated pipe that
allows the bottom of a detention basin, channel or swale to
drain.
Water Table. (1) The free surface of the
groundwater. (2) That surface subject to atmospheric pressure
under the ground, generally rising and falling with the season
or from other conditions such as water withdrawal.
Watershed. The region drained by or contributing
water to a specific point that could be along a stream, lake
or other stormwater facilities. Watersheds are often broken
down into sub-areas for the purpose of hydrologic modeling.
Watershed Area. All land and water within
the confines of a drainage divide.
Wetlands. Areas that are inundated or saturated
by surface water or groundwater at a frequency and duration
sufficient to support, and that under normal circumstances
do support, a prevalence of vegetation typically adapted for
life saturated soil conditions.
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