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Erosion / Sediment Control
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Apr 18 2010, 3:13 PM EDT
kdyson
wording
edit
129 words added
140 words deleted
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There are two ways to accomplish sediment control, structural or non-structural means. Structural methods involve constructing a man made structure (i.e. silt fence, sediment traps,
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(Word count: 561)
Apr 13 2010, 2:14 PM EDT
WilliamWarren001
edit
128 words added
1 word deleted
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Non-structural means that are intended to prevent erosion of soil in the first place. They include minimizing land disturbance, temporary vegetative cover, mulch, floodplain protection, public education, etc...
The greater degree you prevent erosion, the less sediment that has be collected and disposed of.
ILLUSTRATIONA lot illustrations
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(Word count: 585)
Apr 12 2010, 12:02 PM EDT
WilliamWarren001
edit
211 words added
34 words deleted
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Excessive quantities of sediment result in costly damage to aquatic areas and to private and public lands. The obstruction of stream channels and navigable rivers
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(Word count: 454)
Apr 12 2010, 11:47 AM EDT
WilliamWarren001
edit
37 words added
18 words deleted
1 image added
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But regardless of the cause, this one gives you general idea of the concept.
concept
CASE STUDIESlinks to planning and policy case studies (metropolitan scale) or high performance landscape case studies (site-scale) documenting specific places or projects where this asset is a key featureADDITIONAL RESOURCES
other
FLORIDA
weblinks,
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(Word count: 278)
Apr 12 2010, 11:35 AM EDT
WilliamWarren001
edit
175 words added
23 words deleted
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soil mass, transported primarily by flowing water or wind, and eventually deposited as sediment. Water erosion is caused when raindrops falling on bare or sparsely
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(Word count: 246)
Apr 12 2010, 11:20 AM EDT
WilliamWarren001
create
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Created by
WilliamWarren001
Apr 12 2010, 11:20 AM EDT for: no reason given
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GI Systems & Functions
S: Social System
C: Circulatory System
M: Metabolic System
B: Biologic System
H: Hydrologic System
G: Geologic System
Erosion & Sediment Control
Erosion / Sediment Control
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