-
100-Year (or Base) Flood:
-
A
flood event that
statistically has a 1 out of
100 (or one percent) chance
of being equaled or exceeded
on a specific watercourse in
any given year. A flood
event of this magnitude is
often used to determine if
flood insurance is either
advisable or required on a
property.
-
Aggradation:
-
A
progressive buildup or
raising of the channel bed
due to sediment deposition.
Permanent or continuous
aggradation is an indicator
that a change in the
stream’s discharge and
sediment characteristics is
taking place.
-
Alluvial Fan:
-
A
geomorphologic feature
characterized by a cone or
fan-shaped deposit of
boulders, gravel and fine
sediments that have been
eroded from mountain slopes,
transported by flood flows
and then deposited in the
valley floors and which is
subject to flash flooding,
high velocity flows, debris
flows, erosion, sediment
movement and deposition and
channel migration.
-
Area Drainage Master Plan (ADMP):
-
A
plan which identifies the
preferred alternatives of
those identified in an ADMS.
An ADMP provides minimum
criteria and standards for
flood control and drainage
relating to land use and
development.
-
Area Drainage Master Study (ADMS):
-
A
study to develop hydrology
for a watershed, to define
watercourses, identify
potential flood problem
areas, drainage problems and
recommend solutions and
standards for sound
floodplain and stormwater
management. The ADMS will
identify alternative
solutions to a given
flooding or drainage
problem.
-
Armor:
-
Surfacing of channel bed,
banks, or embankment slope
to resist erosion
-
As
Built Plans:
-
A
community may require
submission of "as-built"
plans to certify that a
project was built in
accordance with the permit.
A registered professional
architect or engineer
certifies the actual
construction.
-
Backfill:
-
The
placement of fill material
within a specified
depression, hole or
excavation pit below the
surrounding adjacent ground
level, as a means of
improving flood water
conveyance, or to restore
the land to the natural
contours existing prior to
excavation.
-
Base Flood Elevation:
-
A
base flood elevation (BFE)
is the height of the base
flood, usually in feet, in
relation to the National
Geodetic Vertical Datum of
1929, the North American
Vertical Datum of 1988, or
other datum referenced in
the Flood Insurance Study
report, or the depth of the
base flood, usually in feet,
above the ground surface.
-
Braided Stream:
-
A
stream whose flow is divided
at normal stage by small
islands.
-
Catch Basin:
-
A
chamber or well, usually
built at the curb line of a
street, for the admission of
surface water to a storm
sewer or sub-drain
-
CFS:
-
The
measuring unit of cubic feet
per second (cfs), which is
used to quantify the amount
of flow in a wash. A cubic
foot is equivalent to 7.5
gallons of water. Thus, 1
cfs is 7.5 gallons of water
passing by you every second.
-
Channel:
-
An
open conveyance of surface
stormwater having a bottom
and sides in a linear
configuration. Channels can
be natural or man-made.
Channels have levees or
dikes along their sides to
build up their depth.
Constructed channels can be
plain earth, landscaped, or
lined with concrete, stone,
or any other hard surface to
resist erosion and scour.
-
Channel Failure:
-
Sudden collapse of a channel
due to an unstable
condition.
-
Community Rating System:
-
A
program administered by the
Federal Emergency Management
Agency (FEMA) that
recognizes and rewards
communities working to
reduce flood damages through
a variety of approved
floodplain management and
flood awareness activities.
Through the program, a
community can reduce the
flood insurance premiums
that floodprone property
owners pay.
-
Culvert:
-
A
hydraulically short conduit
which conveys surface water
runoff through a roadway
embankment or through some
other type of flow
obstruction.
-
Delineation:
-
Defining the physical
boundaries of a stream,
floodplain, jurisdictional
wash, etc.
-
Deposit:
-
something dropped or left
behind by moving water, as
sand or mud.
-
Design Discharge:
-
The
nth-year storm for which it
is expected that the
structure or facility is
designed to accommodate.
-
Detention Basin:
-
A
basin or reservoir where
water is stored for
regulating a flood. It has
outlets for releasing the
flows during the floods
-
Development:
-
A
man-made change to property,
such as buildings or other
structures, mining,
dredging, filling, grading,
paving, excavation, or
drilling operations.
-
Discharge:
-
The
amount of water that passes
a specific point on a
watercourse over a given
period of time. Rates of
discharge are usually
measured in cubic feet per
second (cfs).
-
Drainage Basin:
-
A
geographical area which
contributes surface water
runoff to a particular
point. The terms “drainage
basin,” “tributary area,”
and “watershed” can be used
interchangeably.
-
Drainage Clearance:
-
The
approval by the Mohave
County Drainage
Administrator of a grading
and drainage plan to develop
a site. This plan may be a
site plan or an engineered
grading and drainage plan.
-
Dry Well:
-
A
deep hole, covered and
designed to hold drainage
water until it seeps into
the ground.
-
Elevation Certificate:
-
The
Elevation Certificate is an
important administrative
tool of the
National Flood Insurance
Program (NFIP). It is to
be used to provide elevation
information necessary to
ensure compliance with
community floodplain
management ordinances, to
determine the proper
insurance premium rate, and
to support a request for a
Letter of Map Amendment or
Revision (LOMA or LOMR-F).
Click here to download the
Elevation Certificate
Instructions or Form from
FEMA
-
Embankment:
-
A
man-made earth structure
constructed for the purpose
of impounding water.
-
Emergency Spillway:
-
An
outflow from a
detention/retention facility
that provides for the safe
overflow of floodwaters for
large storms that exceed the
design capacity of the
outlet or in the event of a
malfunction. The emergency
spillway prevents the water
from overtopping the
facility.
-
Encroachment:
-
The
result of placing a
building, fence, berm or
other structure in a
floodplain in a manner that
obstructs or increases the
depth (or velocity) of flow
on a watercourse.
-
Erosion:
-
The
wearing away of land by the
flow of water.
-
Erosion Hazard Zone:
-
Land
adjacent to a watercourse
regulated by Mohave County
that is subject to
flood-related erosion
losses.
-
Federally-Mapped Floodplain:
-
A
floodprone area that has
been mapped and accepted by
FEMA as the result of a
flood insurance study (FIS)
for a watercourse and
surrounding areas. Mapped
floodplains are used for
flood insurance needs and
for other regulatory
purposes.
-
FEMA (Federal Emergency
Management Agency):
-
An
independent federal agency
established to respond to
major emergencies that state
and local agencies don't
have the resources to
handle. FEMA seeks to reduce
the loss of life and protect
property against all types
of hazards through a
comprehensive, risk-based
emergency management
program.
Click here to visit the FEMA
web site.
-
Fill Material:
-
any
material used for the
primary purpose of replacing
an aquatic area with dry
land or for changing the
bottom elevation of a
waterbody. This includes
both natural materials
(silt, sand, gravel, rock,
and wood) and manufactured
materials (concrete,
plastic, steel, treated
wood).
-
Flood Control:
-
Various activities and
regulations that help reduce
or prevent damages caused by
flooding. Typical flood
control activities include:
structural flood control
works (such as bank
stabilization, levees, and
drainage channels),
acquisition of floodprone
land, flood insurance
programs and studies, river
and basin management plans,
public education programs,
and flood warning and
emergency preparedness
activities.
-
Flood Insurance Rate Map
(FIRM):
-
Issued by FEMA, these maps
show special hazard areas,
including the 100-year
floodplain. They also show
flood insurance risk zones
and other flood-related
information applicable to a
community.
-
Flood Insurance Study (FIS):
-
Hydrologic and Hydraulic
studies that identify a
flood hazard area, flood
insurance risk zones and
other flood data such as
flood depths and velocities.
-
Flood Proofing:
-
Any
combination of changes to a
structure or property using
berms, flood walls, closures
or sealants, which reduces
or eliminates flood damage
to buildings or property.
-
Flood/Flooding:
-
A
temporary condition caused
by the accumulation of
runoff from any source,
which exceeds the capacity
of a natural or man-made
drainage system and results
in inundation of normally
dry land areas.
-
Floodplain:
-
The
area adjoining a watercourse
that may be covered by
floodwater during a flood.
Storm runoff and flood
events may cause alterations
in the floodplain in certain
areas.
-
Floodplain Management:
-
A
program that uses corrective
and preventative measures to
reduce flood and erosion
damage and preserve natural
habitat and wildlife
resources in floodprone
areas. Some of these
measures include: adopting
and administering
Floodplain Regulations,
resolving
drainage complaint,
protecting riparian habitat
communities, and assuring
effective maintenance and
operation of flood control
works.
-
Floodplain Regulations:
-
Adopted policies, codes,
ordinances, and regulations
pertaining to the use and
development of lands that
lie within a regulatory
floodplain.
Click here to view the
Floodplain Regulations
-
Floodplain Use Permit:
-
An
official document which
authorizes specific
activities within a
regulatory floodplain or
erosion hazard area.
Click here to learn more
about the Flood Plain Use
Permit
-
Floodway:
-
The
channel of a watercourse and
portion of the adjacent
floodplain that is needed to
convey the base or 100-year
flood event without
increasing flood levels by
more than one foot and
without increasing
velocities of flood water.
-
Floodway Fringe:
-
The
areas of a delineated
floodplain adjacent to the
Floodway where
encroachment may be
permitted.
-
Flowage Easement:
-
Legal
right to allow water to flow
across someone’s property
-
Grade Control Structure:
-
A
structure used across a
stream channel placed bank
to bank to control bed
elevation, velocity,
pressure, etc.
-
Grading:
-
Disturbance of existing land
contours
-
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.
-
Habitat Mitigation:
-
The
compensation for the removal
of natural vegetation during
the construction of a flood
control project by
establishing new vegetation
elsewhere.
-
Hydraulic Structures:
-
The
facilities used to impound,
accommodate, convey, or
control the flow of water,
such as dams, intakes,
culverts, channels, and
bridges.
-
Hydraulics:
-
A
field of study dealing with
the flow pattern and rate of
water movement based on the
principles of fluid
mechanics.
-
Hydrology:
-
A
field of study concerned
with the distribution and
circulation of surface
water, as well as water
dynamics below the ground
and in the atmosphere.
-
Lateral Stream Migration:
-
Change in position of a
channel by lateral erosion
of one bank and simultaneous
deposition on the opposite
bank.
-
Levee:
-
A
man-made structure, usually
an earthen embankment often
reinforced with soil cement,
that is designed to contain
or divert the flow of water.
-
LOMA (Letter of Map
Amendment):
-
An
official amendment of a
current Flood Insurance Rate
Map (FIRM) accepted by FEMA
for a property or a
structure. The LOMA verifies
that the structure or
portions of the property
have been removed from a
designated-floodplain area.
-
LOMR (Letter of Map
Revision):
-
An
official revision of a
current Flood Insurance Rate
Map (FIRM) accepted by FEMA,
which reflects changes in
mapped areas for flood
zones, floodplain areas,
floodways and flood
elevations.
-
Low Flow Channel:
-
A
channel within a larger
channel which typically
carries low and/or normal
flows
-
Map Repository:
-
An
agency or entity designated
to maintain official FEMA
flood insurance rate maps
for the community as well as
LOMAs and LOMRs to those
maps.
-
Multi-Use Facility:
-
A
detention or retention basin
that provides additional
benefits to its primary
function of flood control.
Such benefits include
recreation, parking, visual
buffers, or water
harvesting.
-
National Flood Insurance Act
of 1968:
-
An
Act passed by Congress that
established the National
Flood Insurance Program as a
means of mitigating flood
damages. The Act makes flood
insurance available to
communities that adopt and
enforce measures to reduce
flood losses. Prior to the
Act, property owners in
floodprone areas typically
were not able to obtain this
coverage through private
insurance companies.
-
National Flood Insurance
Program (NFIP):
-
A
federal program that allows
property owners to purchase
insurance protection against
losses due to flooding. In
order to participate in this
program, local communities
must agree to implement and
enforce measures that reduce
future flood risks in
special flood hazard areas.
http://www.fema.gov/nfip/
-
Outlet Structure:
-
A
hydraulic structure placed
at the outlet of a channel,
spillway, pipe, etc., for
the purpose of dissipating
energy and providing a
transition to the channel or
pipe downstream.
-
Peak Flow:
-
The
maximum rate of flow through
a watercourse for a given
storm
-
Percolation:
-
The
movement of water through
the subsurface soil layers,
usually continuing downward
to the groundwater or water
table reservoirs.
-
Physical Weathering:
-
Breaking down of 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.
-
Probable Maximum Flood:
-
The
flood runoff that may be
expected from the most
severe combination of
critical meteorologic and
hydrologic conditions that
are reasonably possible in
the region.
-
Reach:
-
A
term used to describe a
specific length of a stream
or watercourse. For example,
the term can be used to
describe a section of a
stream or watercourse
between two bridges.
-
Regulatory:
-
Subject to the control of or
required to follow rules set
forth by a governmental
agency. With respect to
washes or streams it refers
to those areas where the
federal government restricts
the use or development of
areas it has deemed to be
“Waters of the U.S.” These
regulations are part of the
Clean Water Act.
-
Regulatory Flood Elevation:
-
The
elevation which is one foot
above the base flood
elevation for a watercourse.
Where a floodway has been
delineated, the base flood
elevation is the higher of
either the natural or
encroached water surface
elevation of the 100-year
flow.
-
Regulatory Floodplain:
-
A
portion of the geologic
floodplain that may be
inundated by the base flood
where the peak discharge is
100 cubic feet per second
(cfs) or greater. Regulatory
floodplains also include
areas which are subject to
sheet flooding, or areas on
existing recorded
subdivision plats mapped as
being floodprone.
-
Retention Basin:
-
A
basin or reservoir where
water is stored for
regulating a flood. Unlike a
detention basin, it does not
have outlets for releasing
the flows, the water must be
disposed by draining into
the soil, evaporation, or
pumping systems.
-
Riparian Habitat:
-
Plant
communities that occur in
association with any spring,
cienega, lake, watercourse,
river, stream, creek, wash,
arroyo, or other body of
water. Riparian habitats can
be supported by either
surface or subsurface water
sources.
-
Riparian Zone:
-
A
stream and all the
vegetation on its banks.
-
Runoff:
-
The
portion of precipitation on
land that ultimately reaches
streams, especially water
from rain or melted snow
that flows over ground
surface.
-
Sediment:
-
Soil
particles, sand, and
minerals washed from the
land into aquatic systems as
a result of natural and
human activities.
-
Sedimentation:
-
A
large scale water treatment
process where heavy solids
settle out to the bottom of
the treatment tank after
flocculation.
-
Setback:
-
The
minimum distance required
between a man-made structure
and a watercourse. This
distance is measured from
the top edge of the highest
channel bank or the edge of
the 100-year flood water
surface elevation.
-
Sheet Flooding:
-
A
condition where stormwater
runoff forms a sheet of
water to a depth of six
inches or more. Sheet
flooding is often found in
areas where there are no
clearly defined channels.
-
Sheet Flow:
-
Very
shallow overland discharge.
-
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.
-
Spillway:
-
An
outlet pipe or channel
serving to discharge water
from a dam, ditch, gutter,
or basin.
-
Storm Drainage System:
-
A
drainage system for
collecting runoff of
stormwater on highways and
removing it to appropriate
outlets. The system includes
inlets, catch basins, storm
sewers, drains, reservoirs,
pump stations, and detention
basins.
-
Stormwater:
-
Precipitation from rain or
snow that accumulates in a
natural or man-made
watercourse or conveyance
system.
-
Surface Water:
-
Water
that flows in streams and
rivers and in natural lakes,
in wetlands, and in
reservoirs constructed by
humans.
-
Tailwater:
-
The
water surface elevation in
the channel downstream of a
hydraulic structure
-
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.
-
Trashrack:
-
A
metal bar or grate located
at the outlet structure of a
detention or retention basin
which is designed to prevent
blockage of the structure by
debris.
-
Tributary:
-
A
stream that contributes its
water to another stream or
body of water.
-
Variance:
-
Legal
permission to build a
structure in a manner that
would otherwise be
prohibited by an ordinance.
-
Virgin flow:
-
The
streamflow which exists or
would exist if man had not
modified the conditions on
or along the stream or in
the drainage basin.
-
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 waterbody
or a segment of a waterbody
and the water quality
criteria that are necessary
to protect the use or uses
of that particular
waterbody. Water quality
standards also contain an
antidegradation statement.
Every State is required to
develop water quality
criteria standards
applicable to the various
waterbodies 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.
-
Watercourse:
-
Any
minor or major lake, river,
creek, stream, wash, arroyo,
channel or other topographic
feature on or over which
waters flow at least
periodically. Watercourse
includes specifically
designated areas in which
substantial flood damage may
occur.
-
Watercourse Master Plan
(WCMP):
-
A
hydraulic plan for a
watercourse that examines
the cumulative impacts of
existing development and
future encroachment in the
floodplain and future
development in the watershed
on potential flood damages,
and establishes technical
criteria for subsequent
development so as to
minimize potential flood
damages for all flood events
up to and including the one
hundred-year flood.
-
Waters of the U.S.:
-
All
waters which are currently
used, were used in the past,
or may be susceptible to use
in interstate or foreign
commerce.
-
Watershed:
-
An
area from which water drains
into a lake, stream or other
body of water. A watershed
is also often referred to as
a basin, with the basin
boundary defined by a high
ridge or divide, and with a
lake or river located at a
lower point.
-
Wetlands:
-
Those
areas that are inundated or
saturated by surface or
ground water at a frequency
and duration sufficient to
support, and that under
normal circumstances do
support, a prevalence of
vegetation typically adapted
for life in saturated soil
conditions. Wetlands
generally include swamps,
marshes, bogs, and similar
areas.
-
Zone A (unnumbered):
-
Zone
A is a Special Flood Hazard
Area identified by FEMA that
is subject to inundation
from a 100-year flood event.
Because detailed hydraulic
analyses have not been
performed, no base flood
elevation or depths are
shown. Mandatory flood
insurance requirements
apply.
-
Zone AE and A1-30:
-
Special Flood Hazard Areas
subject to inundation by the
100-year flood determined by
a Flood Insurance Study
(FIS). Base flood elevations
are shown within these zones
and mandatory flood
insurance requirements
apply. (Zone AE is used on
newer maps in place of Zones
A1-30.)
-
Zone AH:
-
Special Flood Hazard Areas
subject to inundation by
100-year shallow flooding
(usually areas of ponding)
with average depths between
one and three feet. Base
flood elevations derived
from detailed hydraulic
analyses are shown in this
zone. Mandatory flood
insurance requirements
apply.
-
Zone AO:
-
Special Flood Hazard Areas
subject to inundation by
100-year shallow flooding,
usually resulting from sheet
flow on sloping terrain,
with average depths between
one and three feet. Average
flood depths derived from
detailed hydraulic analyses
are shown within this zone.
Mandatory flood insurance
requirements apply.
-
Zone B, C and X:
-
Areas
that have been identified in
a community flood insurance
study as having moderate or
minimal hazard from
flooding. Buildings or other
improvements in these zones
could be flooded by severe,
concentrated rainfall, in
the absence of adequate
drainage systems. Flood
insurance is available in
participating communities,
but it is not required in
these zones. (Zone X is used
on newer maps in place of
Zones B and C.)
-
Zone D:
-
Unstudied areas where flood
hazards are undetermined but
where flooding is possible.
No mandatory flood insurance
requirements apply, but
coverage is available in
participating communities.