Vanishing Earth Glossary 9Sanitary Sewers: Underground pipes that carry off only domestic or industrial waste, not storm water. Sanitary Survey: An on-site review of the water sources, facilities, equipment, operation and maintenance of a public water system to evaluate the adequacy of those elements for producing and distributing safe drinking water. Sanitary Water (Also known as gray water): Water discharged from sinks, showers, kitchens, or other non-industrial operations, but not from commodes. Sanitation: Control of physical factors in the human environment that could harm development, health, or survival. Saprolite: A soft, clay-rich, thoroughly decomposed rock formed in place by chemical weathering of igneous or metamorphic rock. Forms in humid, tropical, or subtropical climates. Saprophytes: Organisms living on dead or decaying organic matter that help natural decomposition of organic matter in water. Saturated Zone: The area below the water table where all open spaces are filled with water under pressure equal to or greater than that of the atmosphere. 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. Science Advisory Board (SAB): A group of external scientists who advise EPA on science and policy. Scrap: Materials discarded from manufacturing operations that may be suitable for reprocessing. Scrap Metal Processor: Intermediate operating facility where recovered metal is sorted, cleaned of contaminants, and prepared for recycling. Screening: Use of screens to remove coarse floating and suspended solids from sewage. Screening Risk Assessment: A risk assessment performed with few data and many assumptions to identify exposures that should be evaluated more carefully for potential risk. Scrubber: An air pollution device that uses a spray of water or reactant or a dry process to trap pollutants in emissions. Secondary Drinking Water Regulations: Non-enforceable regulations applying to public water systems and specifying the maximum contamination levels that, in the judgment of EPA, are required to protect the public welfare. These regulations apply to any contaminants that may adversely affect the odor or appearance of such water and consequently may cause people served by the system to discontinue its use. Secondary Effect: Action of a stressor on supporting components of the ecosystem, which in turn impact the ecological component of concern. (See:primary effect.) Secondary Materials: Materials that have been manufactured and used at least once and are to be used again. Secondary Standards: National ambient air quality standards designed to protect welfare, including effects on soils, water, crops, vegetation, man-made (anthropogenic) materials, animals, wildlife, weather, visibility, and climate; damage to property; transportation hazards; economic values, and personal comfort and well-being. Secondary Treatment: The second step in most publicly owned waste treatment systems in which bacteria consume the organic parts of the waste. It is accomplished by bringing together waste, bacteria, and oxygen in trickling filters or in the activated sludge process. This treatment removes floating and settleable solids and about 90 percent of the oxygen-demanding substances and suspended solids. Disinfection is the final stage of secondary treatment. (See:primary, tertiary treatment.) Secure Chemical Landfill: (See:landfills.) Secure Maximum Contaminant Level: Maximum permissible level of a contaminant in water delivered to the free flowing outlet of the ultimate user, or of contamination resulting from corrosion of piping and plumbing caused by water quality. Sediment: Topsoil, sand, and minerals washed from the land into water, usually after rain or snow melt. Sediment Yield: The quantity of sediment arriving at a specific location. Sedimentation: Letting solids settle out of wastewater by gravity during treatment. Sedimentation Tanks: Wastewater tanks in which floating wastes are skimmed off and settled solids are removed for disposal. Sediments: Soil, sand, and minerals washed from land into water, usually after rain. They pile up in reservoirs, rivers and harbors, destroying fish and wildlife habitat, and clouding the water so that sunlight cannot reach aquatic plants. Careless farming, mining, and building activities will expose sediment materials, allowing them to wash off the land after rainfall. Seed Protectant: A chemical applied before planting to protect seeds and seedlings from disease or insects. Seepage: Percolation of water through the soil from unlined canals, ditches, laterals, watercourses, or water storage facilities. Selective Pesticide: A chemical designed to affect only certain types of pests, leaving other plants and animals unharmed. Semi-Confined Aquifer: An aquifer partially confined by soil layers of low permeability through which recharge and discharge can still occur. Semivolatile Organic Compounds: Organic compounds that volatilize slowly at standard temperature (20 degrees C and 1 atm pressure). Senescence: The aging process. Sometimes used to describe lakes or other bodies of water in advanced stages of eutrophication. Also used to describe plants and animals. Septic System: An on-site system designed to treat and dispose of domestic sewage. A typical septic system consists of tank that receives waste from a residence or business and a system of tile lines or a pit for disposal of the liquid effluent (sludge) that remains after decomposition of the solids by bacteria in the tank and must be pumped out periodically. Septic Tank: An underground storage tank for wastes from homes not connected to a sewer line. Waste goes directly from the home to the tank. (See:septic system.) Service Connector: The pipe that carries tap water from a public water main to a building. Service Line Sample: A one-liter sample of water that has been standing for at least 6 hours in a service pipeline and is collected according to federal regulations. Service Pipe: The pipeline extending from the water main to the building served or to the consumer's system. Set-Back: Setting a thermometer to a lower temperature when the building is unoccupied to reduce consumption of heating energy. Also refers to setting the thermometer to a higher temperature during unoccupied periods in the cooling season. Settleable Solids: Material heavy enough to sink to the bottom of a wastewater treatment tank. Settling Chamber: A series of screens placed in the way of flue gases to slow the stream of air, thus helping gravity to pull particles into a collection device. Settling Tank: A holding area for wastewater, where heavier particles sink to the bottom for removal and disposal. 7Q10: Seven-day, consecutive low flow with a ten year return frequency; the lowest stream flow for seven consecutive days that would be expected to occur once in ten years. Sewage: The waste and wastewater produced by residential and commercial sources and discharged into sewers. Sewage Lagoon: (See:lagoon.) Sewage Sludge: Sludge produced at a Publicly Owned Treatment Works, the disposal of which is regulated under the Clean Water Act. Sewer: A channel or conduit that carries wastewater and storm-water runoff from the source to a treatment plant or receiving stream. "Sanitary" sewers carry household, industrial, and commercial waste. "Storm" sewers carry runoff from rain or snow. "Combined" sewers handle both. Sewerage: The entire system of sewage collection, treatment, and disposal. Shading Coefficient: The amount of the sun's heat transmitted through a given window compared with that of a standard 1/8- inch-thick single pane of glass under the same conditions. Sharps: Hypodermic needles, syringes (with or without the attached needle), Pasteur pipettes, scalpel blades, blood vials, needles with attached tubing, and culture dishes used in animal or human patient care or treatment, or in medical, research or industrial laboratories. Also included are other types of broken or unbroken glassware that were in contact with infectious agents, such as used slides and cover slips, and unused hypodermic and suture needles, syringes, and scalpel blades. Shock Load: The arrival at a water treatment plant of raw water containing unusual amounts of algae, colloidal matter. color, suspended solids, turbidity, or other pollutants. Short-Circuiting: When some of the water in tanks or basins flows faster than the rest; may result in shorter contact, reaction, or settling times than calculated or presumed. Sick Building Syndrome: Building whose occupants experience acute health and/or comfort effects that appear to be linked to time spent therein, but where no specific illness or cause can be identified. Complaints may be localized in a particular room or zone, or may spread throughout the building. (See:building-related illness.) Signal: The volume or product-level change produced by a leak in a tank. Signal Words: The words used on a pesticide label--Danger, Warning, Caution--to indicate level of toxicity. Significant Deterioration: Pollution resulting from a new source in previously "clean" areas. (See:prevention of significant deterioration.) Significant Municipal Facilities: Those publicly owned sewage treatment plants that discharge a million gallons per day or more and are therefore considered by states to have the potential to substantially affect the quality of receiving waters. Significant Non-Compliance: (See significant violations.) Significant Potential Source of Contamination: A facility or activity that stores, uses, or produces compounds with potential for significant contaminating impact if released into the source water of a public water supply. Significant Violations: Violations by point source dischargers of sufficient magnitude or duration to be a regulatory priority. Silt: Sedimentary materials composed of fine or intermediate-sized mineral particles. Silviculture: Management of global warming land for timber. Single-Breath Canister: Small one-liter canister designed to capture a single breath. Used in air pollutant ingestion research. Sink: Place in the environment where a compound or material collects. Sinking: Controlling oil spills by using an agent to trap the oil and sink it to the bottom of the body of water where the agent and the oil are biodegraded. SIP Call: EPA action requiring a state to resubmit all or part of its State Implementation Plan to demonstrate attainment of the require national ambient air quality standards within the statutory deadline. A SIP Revision is a revision of a SIP altered at the request of EPA or on a state's initiative. (See:State Implementation Plan.) Site: An area or place within the jurisdiction of the EPA and/or a state. Site Assessment Program: A means of evaluating hazardous waste sites through preliminary assessments and site inspections to develop a Hazard Ranking System score. Site Inspection: The collection of information from a Superfund site to determine the extent and severity of hazards posed by the site. It follows and is more extensive than a preliminary assessment. The purpose is to gather information necessary to score the site, using the Hazard Ranking System, and to determine if it presents an immediate threat requiring prompt removal. Site Safety Plan: A crucial element in all removal actions, it includes information on equipment being used, precautions to be taken, and steps to take in the event of an on-site emergency. Siting: The process of choosing a location for a facility. Skimming: Using a machine to remove oil or scum from the surface of the water. Slow Sand Filtration: Passage of raw water through a bed of sand at low velocity, resulting in substantial removal of chemical and biological contaminants. Sludge: A semi-solid residue from any of a number of air or water treatment processes; can be a hazardous waste. Sludge Digester: Tank in which complex organic substances like sewage sludges are biologically dredged. During these reactions, energy is released and much of the sewage is converted to methane, carbon dioxide, and water. Slurry: A watery mixture of insoluble matter resulting from some pollution control techniques. Small Quantity Generator (SQG-sometimes referred to as "Squeegee"): Persons or enterprises that produce 220-2200 pounds per month of hazardous waste; they are required to keep more records than conditionally exempt generators. The largest category of hazardous waste generators, SQGs, include automotive shops, dry cleaners, photographic developers, and many other small businesses. (See:conditionally exempt generators.) Smelter: A facility that melts or fuses ore, often with an accompanying chemical change, to separate its metal content. Emissions cause pollution. "Smelting" is the process involved. Smog: Air pollution typically associated with oxidants. (See:photochemical smog.) Smoke: Particles suspended in air after incomplete combustion. Soft Detergents: Cleaning agents that break down in nature. Soft Water: Any water that does not contain a significant amount of dissolved minerals such as salts of calcium or magnesium. Soil Adsorption Field: A sub-surface area containing a trench or bed with clean stones and a system of piping through which treated sewage may seep into the surrounding soil for further treatment and disposal. Soil and Water Conservation Practices: Control measures consisting of managerial, vegetative, and structural practices to reduce the loss of soil and water. Soil Conditioner: An organic material like humus or compost that helps soil absorb water, build a bacterial community, and take up mineral nutrients. Soil Erodibility: An indicator of a soil's susceptibility to raindrop impact, runoff, and other erosive processes. Soil Gas: Gaseous elements and compounds in the small spaces between particles of the earth and soil. Such gases can be moved or driven out under pressure. Soil Moisture: The water contained in the pore space of the unsaturated zone. Soil Sterilant: A chemical that temporarily or permanently prevents the growth of all plants and animals, Solder: Metallic compound used to seal joints between pipes. Until recently, most solder contained 50 percent lead. Use of solder containing more than 0.2 percent lead in pipes carrying drinking water is now prohibited. Sole-Source Aquifer: An aquifer that supplies 50-percent or more of the drinking water of an area. Solid Waste: Non-liquid, non-soluble materials ranging from municipal garbage to industrial wastes that contain complex and sometimes hazardous substances. Solid wastes also include sewage sludge, agricultural refuse, demolition wastes, and mining residues. Technically, solid waste also refers to liquids and gases in containers. Solid Waste Disposal: The final placement of refuse that is not salvaged or recycled. Solid Waste Management: Supervised handling of waste materials from their source through recovery processes to disposal. Solidification and Stabilization: Removal of wastewater from a waste or changing it chemically to make it less permeable and susceptible to transport by water. Solubility: The amount of mass of a compound that will dissolve in a unit volume of solution. Aqueous Solubility is the maximum concentration of a chemical that will dissolve in pure water at a reference temperature. Soot: Carbon dust formed by incomplete combustion. Sorption: The action of soaking up or attracting substances; process used in many pollution control systems. Source Area: The location of liquid hydrocarbons or the zone of highest soil or groundwater concentrations, or both, of the chemical of concern. Source Characterization Measurements: Measurements made to estimate the rate of release of pollutants into the environment from a source such as an incinerator, landfill, etc. Source Reduction: Reducing the amount of materials entering the waste stream from a specific source by redesigning products or patterns of production or consumption (e.g., using returnable beverage containers). Synonymous with waste reduction. Source Separation: Segregating various wastes at the point of generation (e.g., separation of paper, metal and glass from other wastes to make recycling simpler and more efficient). Source-Water Protection Area: The area delineated by a state for a Public Water Supply or including numerous such suppliers, whether the source is ground water or surface water or both. Sparge or Sparging: Injection of air below the water table to strip dissolved volatile organic compounds and/or oxygenate ground water to facilitate aerobic biodegradation of organic compounds. Special Local-Needs Registration: Registration of a pesticide product by a state agency for a specific use that is not federally registered. However, the active ingredient must be federally registered for other uses. The special use is specific to that state and is often minor, thus may not warrant the additional cost of a full federal registration process. SLN registration cannot be issued for new active ingredients, food-use active ingredients without tolerances, or for a canceled registration. The products cannot be shipped across state lines. Special Review: Formerly known as Rebuttable Presumption Against Registration (RPAR), this is the regulatory process through which existing pesticides suspected of posing unreasonable risks to human health, non-target organisms, or the environment are referred for review by EPA. Such review requires an intensive risk/benefit analysis with opportunity for public comment. If risk is found to outweigh social and economic benefits, regulatory actions can be initiated, ranging from label revisions and use-restriction to cancellation or suspended registration. Special Waste: Items such as household hazardous waste, bulky wastes (refrigerators, pieces of furniture, etc.) tires, and used oil. Species: 1. A reproductively isolated aggregate of interbreeding organisms having common attributes and usually designated by a common name.2. An organism belonging to belonging to such a category. Specific Conductance: Rapid method of estimating the dissolved solid content of a water supply by testing its capacity to carry an electrical current. Specific Yield: The amount of water a unit volume of saturated permeable rock will yield when drained by gravity. Spill Prevention, Containment, and Countermeasures Plan (SPCP): Plan covering the release of hazardous substances as defined in the Clean Water Act. Spoil: Dirt or rock removed from its original location--destroying the composition of the soil in the process--as in strip-mining, dredging, or construction. Sprawl: Unplanned development of open land. Spray Tower Scrubber: A device that sprays alkaline water into a chamber where acid gases are present to aid in neutralizing the gas. Spring: Ground water seeping out of the earth where the water table intersects the ground surface. Spring Melt/Thaw: The process whereby warm temperatures melt winter snow and ice. Because various forms of acid deposition may have been stored in the frozen water, the melt can result in abnormally large amounts of acidity entering streams and rivers, sometimes causing fish kills. Stabilization: Conversion of the active organic matter in sludge into inert, harmless material. Stabilization Ponds: (See:lagoon.) Stable Air: A motionless mass of air that holds, instead of dispersing, pollutants. Stack: A chimney, smokestack, or vertical pipe that discharges used air. Stack Effect: Air, as in a chimney, that moves upward because it is warmer than the ambient atmosphere. Stack Effect: Flow of air resulting from warm air rising, creating a positive pressure area at the top of a building and negative pressure area at the bottom. This effect can overpower the mechanical system and disrupt building ventilation and air circulation. Stack Gas: (See:flue gas.) Stage II Controls: Systems placed on service station gasoline pumps to control and capture gasoline vapors during refuelling. Stagnation: Lack of motion in a mass of air or water that holds pollutants in place. Stakeholder: Any organization, governmental entity, or individual that has a stake in or may be impacted by a given approach to environmental regulation, pollution prevention, energy conservation, etc. Standard Industrial Classification Code: Also known as SIC Codes, a method of grouping industries with similar products or services and assigning codes to these groups. Standard Sample: The part of finished drinking water that is examined for the presence of coliform bacteria. Standards: Norms that impose limits on the amount of pollutants or emissions produced. EPA establishes minimum standards, but states are allowed to be stricter. Start of a Response Action: The point in time when there is a guarantee or set-aside of funding by EPA, other federal agencies, states or Principal Responsible Parties in order to begin response actions at a Superfund site. State Emergency Response Commission (SERC): Commission appointed by each state governor according to the requirements of SARA Title III. The SERCs designate emergency planning districts, appoint local emergency planning committees, and supervise and coordinate their activities. State environmental Goals and Indication Project: Program to assist state environmental agencies by providing technical and financial assistance in the development of environmental goals and indicators. State Implementation Plans (SIP): EPA approved state plans for the establishment, regulation, and enforcement of air pollution standards. State Management Plan: Under FIFRA, a state management plan required by EPA to allow states, tribes, and U.S. territories the flexibility to design and implement ways to protect ground water from the use of certain pesticides. Static Water Depth: The vertical distance from the centerline of the pump discharge down to the surface level of the free pool while no water is being drawn from the pool or water table. Static Water Level: 1. Elevation or level of the water table in a well when the pump is not operating. 2. The level or elevation to which water would rise in a tube connected to an artesian aquifer or basin in a conduit under pressure. Stationary Source: A fixed-site producer of pollution, mainly power plants and other facilities using industrial combustion processes. (See:point source.) Sterilization: The removal or destruction of all microorganisms, including pathogenic and other bacteria, vegetative forms, and spores. Sterilizer: One of three groups of anti-microbials registered by EPA for public health uses. EPA considers an antimicrobial to be a sterilizer when it destroys or eliminates all forms of bacteria, viruses, and fungi and their spores. Because spores are considered the most difficult form of microorganism to destroy, EPA considers the term sporicide to be synonymous with sterilizer. Storage: Temporary holding of waste pending treatment or disposal, as in containers, tanks, waste piles, and surface impoundments. Storm Sewer: A system of pipes (separate from sanitary sewers) that carries water runoff from buildings and land surfaces. Stratification: Separating into layers. Stratigraphy: Study of the formation, composition, and sequence of sediments, whether consolidated or not. Stratosphere: The portion of the atmosphere 10-to-25 miles above the earth's surface. Stressors: Physical, chemical, or biological entities that can induce adverse effects on ecosystems or human health. Strip-Cropping: Growing crops in a systematic arrangement of strips or bands that serve as barriers to wind and water erosion. Strip-Mining: A process that uses machines to scrape soil or rock away from mineral deposits just under the earth's surface. Structural Deformation: Distortion in walls of a tank after liquid has been added or removed. Subchronic: Of intermediate duration, usually used to describe studies or periods of exposure lasting between 5 and 90 days. Subchronic Exposure: Multiple or continuous exposures lasting for approximately ten percent of an experimental species lifetime, usually over a three-month period. Submerged Aquatic Vegetation: Vegetation that lives at or below the water surface; an important habitat for young fish and other aquatic organisms. Subwatershed: Topographic perimeter of the catchment area of a stream tributary. Sulfur Dioxide (SO2): A pungent, colorless, gasformed primarily by the combustion of fossil fuels; becomes a pollutant when present in large amounts. Sump: A pit or tank that catches liquid runoff for drainage or disposal. Superchlorination: Chlorination with doses that are deliberately selected to produce water free of combined residuals so large as to require dechlorination. Supercritical Water: A type of thermal treatment using moderate temperatures and high pressures to enhance the ability of water to break down large organic molecules into smaller, less toxic ones. Oxygen injected during this process combines with simple organic compounds to form carbon dioxide and water. Superfund: The program operated under the legislative authority of CERCLA and SARA that funds and carries out EPA solid waste emergency and long-term removal and remedial activities. These activities include establishing the National Priorities List, investigating sites for inclusion on the list, determining their priority, and conducting and/or supervising cleanup and other remedial actions. Superfund Innovative Technology Evaluation (SITE) Program: EPA program to promote development and use of innovative treatment and site characterization technologies in Superfund site cleanups. Supplemental Registration: An arrangement whereby a registrant licenses another company to market its pesticide product under the second company's registration. Supplier of Water: Any person who owns or operates a public water supply. Surface Impoundment: Treatment, storage, or disposal of liquid hazardous wastes in ponds. Surface Runoff: Precipitation, snow melt, or irrigation water in excess of what can infiltrate the soil surface and be stored in small surface depressions; a major transporter of non-point source pollutants in rivers, streams, and lakes.. Surface Uranium Mines: Strip mining operations for removal of uranium-bearing ore. Surface Water: All water naturally open to the atmosphere (rivers, lakes, reservoirs, ponds, streams, impoundments, seas, estuaries, etc.) Surface-Water Treatment Rule: Rule that specifies maximum contaminant level goals for Giardia lamblia, viruses, and Legionella and promulgates filtration and disinfection requirements for public water systems using surface-water or ground-water sources under the direct influence of surface water. The regulations also specify water quality, treatment, and watershed protection criteria under which filtration may be avoided. Surfacing ACM: Asbestos-containing material that is sprayed or troweled on or otherwise applied to surfaces, such as acoustical plaster on ceilings and fireproofing materials on structural members. Surfacing Material: Material sprayed or troweled onto structural members (beams, columns, or decking) for fire protection; or on ceilings or walls for fireproofing, acoustical or decorative purposes. Includes textured plaster, and other textured wall and ceiling surfaces. Surfactant: A detergent compound that promotes lathering. Surrogate Data: Data from studies of test organisms or a test substance that are used to estimate the characteristics or effects on another organism or substance. Surveillance System: A series of monitoring devices designed to check on environmental conditions. Susceptibility Analysis: An analysis to determine whether a Public Water Supply is subject to significant pollution from known potential sources. Suspect Material: Building material suspected of containing asbestos; e.g., surfacing material, floor tile, ceiling tile, thermal system insulation. Suspended Loads: Specific sediment particles maintained in the water column by turbulence and carried with the flow of water. Suspended Solids: Small particles of solid pollutants that float on the surface of, or are suspended in, sewage or other liquids. They resist removal by conventional means. Suspension: Suspending the use of a pesticide when EPA deems it necessary to prevent an imminent hazard resulting from its continued use. An emergency suspension takes effect immediately; under an ordinary suspension a registrant can request a hearing before the suspension goes into effect. Such a hearing process might take six months. Suspension Culture: Cells growing in a liquid nutrient medium. Swamp: A type of wetland dominated by woody vegetation but without appreciable peat deposits. Swamps may be fresh or salt water and tidal or non-tidal. (See:wetlands.) Synergism: An interaction of two or more chemicals that results in an effect greater than the sum of their separate effects. Synthetic Organic Chemicals (SOCs): Man-made (anthropogenic) organic chemicals. Some SOCs are volatile; others tend to stay dissolved in water instead of evaporating. System With a Single Service Connection: A system that supplies drinking water to consumers via a single service line. Systemic Pesticide: A chemical absorbed by an organism that interacts with the organism and makes the organism toxic to pests. Tail Water: The runoff of irrigation water from the lower end of an irrigated field. Tailings: Residue of raw material or waste separated out during the processing of crops or mineral ores. Tailpipe Standards: Emissions limitations applicable to mobile source engine exhausts. Tampering: Adjusting, negating, or removing pollution control equipment on a motor vehicle. Technical Assistance Grant (TAG): As part of the Superfund program, Technical Assistance Grants of up to $50,000 are provided to citizens' groups to obtain assistance in interpreting information related to clean-ups at Superfund sites or those proposed for the National Priorities List. Grants are used by such groups to hire technical advisors to help them understand the site-related technical information for the duration of response activities. Technical-Grade Active Ingredient (TGA): A pesticide chemical in pure form as it is manufactured prior to being formulated into an end-use product (e.g. wettable powders, granules, emulsifiable concentrates). Registered manufactured products composed of such chemicals are known as Technical Grade Products. Technology-Based Limitations: Industry-specific effluent limitations based on best available preventive technology applied to a discharge when it will not cause a violation of water quality standards at low stream flows. Usually applied to discharges into large rivers. Technology-Based Standards: Industry-specific effluent limitations applicable to direct and indirect sources which are developed on a category-by-category basis using statutory factors, not including water-quality effects. Teratogen: A substance capable of causing birth defects. Teratogenesis: The introduction of nonhereditary birth defects in a developing fetus by exogenous factors such as physical or chemical agents acting in the womb to interfere with normal embryonic development. Terracing: Dikes built along the contour of sloping farm land that hold runoff and sediment to reduce erosion. Tertiary Treatment: Advanced cleaning of wastewater that goes beyond the secondary or biological stage, removing nutrients such as phosphorus, nitrogen, and most BOD and suspended solids. Theoretical Maximum Residue Contribution: The theoretical maximum amount of a pesticide in the daily diet of an average person. It assumes that the diet is composed of all food items for which there are tolerance-level residues of the pesticide. The TMRC is expressed as milligrams of pesticide/kilograms of body weight/day. Therapeutic Index: The ratio of the dose required to produce toxic or lethal effects to the dose required to produce nonadverse or therapeutic response. Thermal Pollution: Discharge of heated water from industrial processes that can kill or injure aquatic organisms. Thermal Stratification: The formation of layers of different temperatures in a lake or reservoir. Thermal System Insulation (TSI): Asbestos-containing material applied to pipes, fittings, boilers, breeching, tanks, ducts, or other interior structural components to prevent heat loss or gain or water condensation. Thermal Treatment: Use of elevated temperatures to treat hazardous wastes. (See:incineration; pyrolysis.) Thermocline: The middle layer of a thermally stratified lake or reservoir. In this layer, there is a rapid decrease in temperatures in a lake or reservoir. Threshold: The lowest dose of a chemical at which a specified measurable effect is observed and below which it is not observed. Threshold: The dose or exposure level below which a significant adverse effect is not expected. Threshold Level: Time-weighted average pollutant concentration values, exposure beyond which is likely to adversely affect human health. (See:environmental exposure) Threshold Limit Value (TLV): The concentration of an airborne substance to which an average person can be repeatedly exposed without adverse effects. TLVs may be expressed in three ways: (1) TLV-TWA--Time weighted average, based on an allowable exposure averaged over a normal 8-hour workday or 40-hour work- week; (2) TLV-STEL--Short-term exposure limit or maximum concentration for a brief specified period of time, depending on a specific chemical (TWA must still be met); and (3) TLV-C--Ceiling Exposure Limit or maximum exposure concentration not to be exceeded under any circumstances. (TWA must still be met.) Threshold Odor: (See:Odor threshold) Threshold Planning Quantity: A quantity designated for each chemical on the list of extremely hazardous substances that triggers notification by facilities to the State Emergency Response Commission that such facilities are subject to emergency planning requirements under SARA Title III. Thropic Levels: A functional classification of species that is based on feeding relationships (e.g. generally aquatic and terrestrial green plants comprise the first thropic level, and herbivores comprise the second.) Tidal Marsh: Low, flat marshlands traversed by channels and tidal hollows, subject to tidal inundation; normally, the only vegetation present is salt-tolerant bushes and grasses. (See:wetlands.) Tillage: Plowing, seedbed preparation, and cultivation practices. Time-weighted Average (TWA): In air sampling, the average air concentration of contaminants during a given period. Tire Processor: Intermediate operating facility where recovered tires are processed in preparation for recycling. Tires: As used in recycling, passenger car and truck tires (excludes airplane, bus, motorcycle and special service military, agricultural, off-the-road and-slow speed industrial tires). Car and truck tires are recycled into rubber products such as trash cans, storage containers, rubberized asphalt or used whole for playground and reef construction. Tolerance Petition: A formal request to establish a new tolerance or modify an existing one. Tolerances: Permissible residue levels for pesticides in raw agricultural produce and processed foods. Whenever a pesticide is registered for use on a food or a feed crop, a tolerance (or exemption from the tolerance requirement) must be established. EPA establishes the tolerance levels, which are enforced by the Food and Drug Administration and the Department of Agriculture. Tonnage: The amount of waste that a landfill accepts, usually expressed in tons per month. The rate at which a landfill accepts waste is limited by the landfill's permit. Topography: The physical features of a surface area including relative elevations and the position of natural and man-made (anthropogenic) features. Total Dissolved Phosphorous: The total phosphorous content of all material that will pass through a filter, which is determined as orthophosphate without prior digestion or hydrolysis. Also called soluble P. or ortho P. Total Dissolved Solids (TDS): All material that passes the standard glass river filter; now called total filtrable residue. Term is used to reflect salinity. Total Petroleum Hydrocarbons (TPH): Measure of the concentration or mass of petroleum hydrocarbon constituents present in a given amount of soil or water. The word "total" is a misnomer--few, if any, of the procedures for quantifying hydrocarbons can measure all of them in a given sample. Volatile ones are usually lost in the process and not quantified and non-petroleum hydrocarbons sometimes appear in the analysis. Total Recovered Petroleum Hydrocarbon: A method for measuring petroleum hydrocarbons in samples of soil or water. Total Suspended Particles (TSP): A method of monitoring airborne particulate matter by total weight. Total Suspended Solids (TSS): A measure of the suspended solids in wastewater, effluent, or water bodies, determined by tests for "total suspended non-filterable solids." (See:suspended solids.) Toxaphene: Chemical that causes adverse health effects in domestic water supplies and is toxic to fresh water and marine aquatic life. Toxic Chemical: Any chemical listed in EPA rules as "Toxic Chemicals Subject to Section 313 of the Emergency Planning and Community Right-to-Know Act of 1986." Toxic Chemical Release Form: Information form required of facilities that manufacture, process, or use (in quantities above a specific amount) chemicals listed under SARA Title III. Toxic Chemical Use Substitution: Replacing toxic chemicals with less harmful chemicals in industrial processes. Toxic Cloud: Airborne plume of gases, vapors, fumes, or aerosols containing toxic materials. Toxic Concentration: The concentration at which a substance produces a toxic effect. Toxic Dose: The dose level at which a substance produces a toxic effect. Toxic Pollutants: Materials that cause death, disease, or birth defects in organisms that ingest or absorb them. The quantities and exposures necessary to cause these effects can vary widely. Toxic Release Inventory: Database of toxic releases in the United States compiled from SARA Title III Section 313 reports. Toxic Substance: A chemical or mixture that may present an unreasonable risk of injury to health or the environment. Toxic Waste: A waste that can produce injury if inhaled, swallowed, or absorbed through the skin. Toxicant: A harmful substance or agent that may injure an exposed organism. Toxicity: The degree to which a substance or mixture of substances can harm humans or animals. Acute toxicity involves harmful effects in an organism through a single or short-term exposure. Chronic toxicity is the ability of a substance or mixture of substances to cause harmful effects over an extended period, usually upon repeated or continuous exposure sometimes lasting for the entire life of the exposed organism. Subchronic toxicity is the ability of the substance to cause effects for more than one year but less than the lifetime of the exposed organism. Toxicity Assessment: Characterization of the toxicological properties and effects of a chemical, with special emphasis on establishment of dose-response characteristics. Toxicity Testing: Biological testing (usually with an invertebrate, fish, or small mammal) to determine the adverse effects of a compound or effluent. Toxicological Profile: An examination, summary, and interpretation of a hazardous substance to determine levels of exposure and associated health effects. Transboundary Pollutants: Air pollution that travels from one jurisdiction to another, often crossing state or international boundaries. Also applies to water pollution. Transfer Station: Facility where solid waste is transferred from collection vehicles to larger trucks or rail cars for longer distance transport. Transient Water System: A non-community water system that does not serve 25 of the same nonresidents per day for more than six months per year. Transmission Lines: Pipelines that transport raw water from its source to a water treatment plant, then to the distribution grid system. Transmissivity: The ability of an aquifer to transmit water. Transpiration: The process by which water vapor is lost to the atmosphere from living plants. The term can also be applied to the quantity of water thus dissipated. Transportation Control Measures (TCMs): Steps taken by a locality to reduce vehicular emission and improve air quality by reducing or changing the flow of traffic; e.g. bus and HOV lanes, carpooling and other forms of ride-shairing, public transit, bicycle lanes. Transporter: Hauling firm that picks up properly packaged and labeled hazardous waste from generators and transports it to designated facilities for treatment, storage, or disposal. Transporters are subject to EPA and DOT hazardous waste regulations. Trash: Material considered worthless or offensive that is thrown away. Generally defined as dry waste material, but in common usage it is a synonym for garbage, rubbish, or refuse. Trash-to-Energy Plan: Burning trash to produce energy. Treatability Studies: Tests of potential cleanup technologies conducted in a laboratory (See:bench-scale tests.) Treated Regulated Medical Waste: Medical waste treated to substantially reduce or eliminate its pathogenicity, but that has not yet been destroyed. Treated Wastewater: Wastewater that has been subjected to one or more physical, chemical, and biological processes to reduce its potential of being health hazard. Treatment: (1) Any method, technique, or process designed to remove solids and/or pollutants from solid waste, waste-streams, effluents, and air emissions. (2) Methods used to change the biological character or composition of any regulated medical waste so as to substantially reduce or eliminate its potential for causing disease. Treatment Plant: A structure built to treat wastewater before discharging it into the environment. Treatment, Storage, and Disposal Facility: Site where a hazardous substance is treated, stored, or disposed of. TSD facilities are regulated by EPA and states under RCRA. Tremie: Device used to place concrete or grout under water. Trial Burn: An incinerator test in which emissions are monitored for the presence of specific organic compounds, particulates, and hydrogen chloride. Trichloroethylene (TCE): A stable, low boiling-point colorless liquid, toxic if inhaled. Used as a solvent or metal degreasing agent, and in other industrial applications. Trickle Irrigation: Method in which water drips to the soil from perforated tubes or emitters. Trickling Filter: A coarse treatment system in which wastewater is trickled over a bed of stones or other material covered with bacteria that break down the organic waste and produce clean water. Trihalomethane (THM): One of a family of organic compounds named as derivative of methane. THMs are generally by-products of chlorination of drinking water that contains organic material. Troposhpere: The layer of the atmosphere closest to the earth's surface. Trust Fund (CERCLA): A fund set up under the Comprehensive environmental Response, Compensation and Liability Act (CERCLA) to help pay for cleanup of hazardous waste sites and for legal action to force those responsible for the sites to clean them up. Tube Settler: Device using bundles of tubes to let solids in water settle to the bottom for removal by conventional sludge collection means; sometimes used in sedimentation basins and clarifiers to improve particle removal. Tuberculation: Development or formation of small mounds of corrosion products on the inside of iron pipe. These tubercules roughen the inside of the pipe, increasing its resistance to water flow. Tundra: A type of treeless ecosystem dominated by lichens, mosses, grasses, and woody plants. Tundra is found at high latitudes (arctic tundra) and high altitudes (alpine tundra). Arctic tundra is underlain by permafrost and is usually water saturated. (See:wetlands.) Turbidimeter: A device that measures the cloudiness of suspended solids in a liquid; a measure of the quantity of suspended solids. Turbidity: 1. Haziness in air caused by the presence of particles and pollutants. 2. A cloudy condition in water due to suspended silt or organic matter. Ultra Clean Coal (UCC): Coal that is washed, ground into fine particles, then chemically treated to remove sulfur, ash, silicone, and other substances; usually briquetted and coated with a sealant made from coal. Ultraviolet Rays: Radiation from the sun that can be useful or potentially harmful. UV rays from one part of the spectrum (UV-A) enhance plant life. UV rays from other parts of the spectrum (UV-B) can cause skin cancer or other tissue damage. The ozone layer in the atmosphere partly shields us from ultraviolet rays reaching the earth's surface. Uncertainty Factor: One of several factors used in calculating the reference dose from experimental data. UFs are intended to account for (1) the variation in sensitivity among humans; (2) the uncertainty in extrapolating animal data to humans; (3) the uncertainty in extrapolating data obtained in a study that covers less than the full life of the exposed animal or human; and (4) the uncertainty in using LOAEL data rather than NOAEL data. Unconfined Aquifer: An aquifer containing water that is not under pressure; the water level in a well is the same as the water table outside the well. Underground Injection Control (UIC): The program under the Safe Drinking Water Act that regulates the use of wells to pump fluids into the ground. Underground Injection Wells: Steel- and concrete-encased shafts into which hazardous waste is deposited by force and under pressure. Underground Sources of Drinking Water: Aquifers currently being used as a source of drinking water or those capable of supplying a public water system. They have a total dissolved solids content of 10,000 milligrams per liter or less, and are not "exempted aquifers." (See:exempted aquifer.) Underground Storage Tank (UST): A tank located at least partially underground and designed to hold gasoline or other petroleum products or chemicals. Unreasonable Risk: Under the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act (FIFRA), "unreasonable adverse effects" means any unreasonable risk to man or the environment, taking into account the medical, economic, social, and environmental costs and benefits of any pesticide. Unsaturated Zone: The area above the water table where soil pores are not fully saturated, although some water may be present. Upper Detection Limit: The largest concentration that an instrument can reliably detect. Uranium Mill Tailings Piles: Former uranium ore processing sites that contain leftover radioactive materials (wastes), including radium and unrecovered uranium. Uranium Mill-Tailings Waste Piles: Licensed active mills with tailings piles and evaporation ponds created by acid or alkaline leaching processes. Urban Runoff: Storm water from city streets and adjacent domestic or commercial properties that carries pollutants of various kinds into the sewer systems and receiving waters. Urea-Formaldehyde Foam Insulation: A material once used to conserve energy by sealing crawl spaces, attics, etc.; no longer used because emissions were found to be a health hazard. Use Cluster: A set of competing chemicals, processes, and/or technologies that can substitute for one another in performing a particular function. Used Oil: Spent motor oil from passenger cars and trucks collected at specified locations for recycling (not included in the category of municipal solid waste). User Fee: Fee collected from only those persons who use a particular service, as compared to one collected from the public in general. Utility Load: The total electricity demand for a utility district. Vadose Zone: The zone between land surface and the water table within which the moisture content is less than saturation (except in the capillary fringe) and pressure is less than atmospheric. Soil pore space also typically contains air or other gases. The capillary fringe is included in the vadose zone. (See:Unsaturated Zone.) Valued environmental Attributes/Components: Those aspects(components/processes/functions) of ecosystems, human health, and environmental welfare considered to be important and potentially at risk from human activity or natural hazards. Similar to the term "valued environmental components" used in environmental impact assessment. Vapor: The gas given off by substances that are solids or liquids at ordinary atmospheric pressure and temperatures. Vapor Capture System: Any combination of hoods and ventilation system that captures or contains organic vapors so they may be directed to an abatement or recovery device. Vapor Dispersion: The movement of vapor clouds in air due to wind, thermal action, gravity spreading, and mixing. Vapor Plumes: Flue gases visible because they contain water droplets. Vapor Pressure: A measure of a substance's propensity to evaporate, vapor pressure is the force per unit area exerted by vapor in an equilibrium state with surroundings at a given pressure. It increases exponentially with an increase in temperature. A relative measure of chemical volatility, vapor pressure is used to calculate water partition coefficients and volatilization rate constants. Vapor Recovery System: A system by which the volatile gases from gasoline are captured instead of being released into the atmosphere. Variance: Government permission for a delay or exception in the application of a given law, ordinance, or regulation. Vector: 1. An organism, often an insect or rodent, that carries disease. 2. Plasmids, viruses, or bacteria used to transport genes into a host cell. A gene is placed in the vector; the vector then "infects" the bacterium. Vegetative Controls: Non-point source pollution control practices that involve vegetative cover to reduce erosion and minimize loss of pollutants. Vehicle Miles Travelled (VMT): A measure of the extent of motor vehicle operation; the total number of vehicle miles travelled within a specific geographic area over a given period of time. Ventilation Rate: The rate at which indoor air enters and leaves a building. Expressed as the number of changes of outdoor air per unit of time (air changes per hour (ACH), or the rate at which a volume of outdoor air enters in cubic feet per minute (CFM). Ventilation/Suction: The act of admitting fresh air into a space in order to replace stale or contaminated air; achieved by blowing air into the space. Similarly, suction represents the admission of fresh air into an interior space by lowering the pressure outside of the space, thereby drawing the contaminated air outward. Venturi Scrubbers: Air pollution control devices that use water to remove particulate matter from emissions. Vinyl Chloride: A chemical compound, used in producing some plastics, that is believed to be oncogenic. Virgin Materials: Resources extracted from nature in their raw form, such as timber or metal ore. Viscosity: The molecular friction within a fluid that produces flow resistance. Volatile: Any substance that evaporates readily. Volatile Liquids: Liquids which easily vaporize or evaporate at room temperature. Volatile Organic Compound (VOC): Any organic compound that participates in atmospheric photochemical reactions except those designated by EPA as having negligible photochemical reactivity. Volatile Solids: Those solids in water or other liquids that are lost on ignition of the dry solids at 550° centigrade. Volatile Synthetic Organic Chemicals: Chemicals that tend to volatilize or evaporate. Volume Reduction: Processing waste materials to decrease the amount of space they occupy, usually by compacting, shredding, incineration, or composting. Volumetric Tank Test: One of several tests to determine the physical integrity of a storage tank; the volume of fluid in the tank is measured directly or calculated from product-level changes. A marked drop in volume indicates a leak. Vulnerability Analysis: Assessment of elements in the community that are susceptible to damage if hazardous materials are released. Vulnerable Zone: An area over which the airborne concentration of a chemical accidentally released could reach the level of concern. Waste: 1. Unwanted materials left over from a manufacturing process. 2. Refuse from places of human or animal habitation. Waste Characterization: Identification of chemical and microbiological constituents of a waste material. Waste Exchange: Arrangement in which companies exchange their wastes for the benefit of both parties. Waste Feed: The continuous or intermittent flow of wastes into an incinerator. Waste Generation: The weight or volume of materials and products that enter the waste stream before recycling, composting, landfilling, or combustion takes place. Also can represent the amount of waste generated by a given source or category of sources. Waste Load Allocation: 1. The maximum load of pollutants each discharger of waste is allowed to release into a particular waterway. Discharge limits are usually required for each specific water quality criterion being, or expected to be, violated. 2. The portion of a stream's total assimilative capacity assigned to an individual discharge. Waste Minimization: Measures or techniques that reduce the amount of wastes generated during industrial production processes; term is also applied to recycling and other efforts to reduce the amount of waste going into the waste stream. Waste Piles: Non-containerized, lined or unlined accumulations of solid, nonflowing waste. Waste Reduction: Using source reduction, recycling, or composting to prevent or reduce waste generation. Waste Stream: The total flow of solid waste from homes, businesses, institutions, and manufacturing plants that is recycled, burned, or disposed of in landfills, or segments thereof such as the "residential waste stream" or the "recyclable waste stream." Waste Treatment Lagoon: Impoundment made by excavation or earth fill for biological treatment of wastewater. Waste Treatment Plant: A facility containing a series of tanks, screens, filters and other processes by which pollutants are removed from water. Waste Treatment Stream: The continuous movement of waste from generator to treater and disposer. Waste-Heat Recovery: Recovering heat discharged as a byproduct of one process to provide heat needed by a second process. Waste-to-Energy Facility/Municipal-Waste Combustor: Facility where recovered municipal solid waste is converted into a usable form of energy, usually via combustion. Wastewater: The spent or used water from a home, community, farm, or industry that contains dissolved or suspended matter.Water Pollution: The presence in water of enough harmful or objectionable material to damage the water's quality. Wastewater Infrastructure: The plan or network for the collection, treatment, and disposal of sewage in a community. The level of treatment will depend on the size of the community, the type of discharge, and/or the designated use of the receiving water. Wastewater Operations and Maintenance: Actions taken after construction to ensure that facilities constructed to treat wastewater will be operated, maintained, and managed to reach prescribed effluent levels in an optimum manner. Wastewater Treatment Plan: A facility containing a series of tanks, screens, filters, and other processes by which pollutants are removed from water. Most treatments include chlorination to attain safe drinking water standards. Water Purveyor: A public utility, mutual water company, county water district, or municipality that delivers drinking water to customers. Water Quality Criteria: Levels of water quality expected to render a body of water suitable for its designated use. Criteria are based on specific levels of pollutants that would make the water harmful if used for drinking, swimming, farming, fish production, or industrial processes. Water Quality Standards: State-adopted and EPA-approved ambient standards for water bodies. The standards prescribe the use of the water body and establish the water quality criteria that must be met to protect designated uses. Water Quality-Based Limitations: Effluent limitations applied to dischargers when mere technology-based limitations would cause violations of water quality standards. Usually applied to discharges into small streams. Water Quality-Based Permit: A permit with an effluent limit more stringent than one based on technology performance. Such limits may be necessary to protect the designated use of receiving waters (e.g. recreation, irrigation, industry or water supply). Water Solubility: The maximum possible concentration of a chemical compound dissolved in water. If a substance is water soluble it can very readily disperse through the environment. Water Storage Pond: An impound for liquid wastes designed to accomplish some degree of biochemical treatment. Water Supplier: One who owns or operates a public water system. Water Supply System: The collection, treatment, storage, and distribution of potable water from source to consumer. Water Table: The level of groundwater. Water Treatment Lagoon: An impound for liquid wastes designed to accomplish some degree of biochemical treatment. Water Well: An excavation where the intended use is for location, acquisition, development, or artificial recharge of ground water. Water-Soluble Packaging: Packaging that dissolves in water; used to reduce exposure risks to pesticide mixers and loaders. Water-Source Heat Pump: Heat pump that uses wells or heat exchangers to transfer heat from water to the inside of a building. Most such units use ground water. (See:groundsource heat pump; heat pump.) Waterborne Disease Outbreak: The significant occurence of acute illness associated with drinking water from a public water system that is deficient in treatment, as determined by appropriate local or state agencies. Watershed: The land area that drains into a stream; the watershed for a major river may encompass a number of smaller watersheds that ultimately combine at a common point. Watershed Approach: A coordinated framework for environmental management that focuses public and private efforts on the highest priority problems within hydrologically-defined geographic areas taking into consideration both ground and surface water flow. Watershed Area: A topographic area within a line drawn connecting the highest points uphill of a drinking waterintake into which overland flow drains. Weight of Scientific Evidence: Considerations in assessing the interpretation of published information about toxicity--quality of testing methods, size and power of study design, consistency of results across studies, and biological plausibility of exposure-response relationships and statistical associations. Weir: 1. A wall or plate placed in an open channel to measure the flow of water. 2. A wall or obstruction used to control flow from settling tanks and clarifiers to ensure a uniform flow rate and avoid short-circuiting. (See:short-circuiting.) Well: A bored, drilled, or driven shaft, or a dug hole whose depth is greater than the largest surface dimension and whose purpose is to reach underground water supplies or oil, or to store or bury fluids below ground. Well Field: Area containing one or more wells that produce usable amounts of water or oil. Well Injection: The subsurface emplacement of fluids into a well. Well Monitoring: Measurement by on-site instruments or laboratory methods of well water quality. Well Plug: A watertight, gastight seal installed in a bore hole or well to prevent movement of fluids. Well Point: A hollow vertical tube, rod, or pipe terminating in a perforated pointed shoe and fitted with a fine-mesh screen. Wellhead Protection Area: A protected surface and subsurface zone surrounding a well or well field supplying a public water system to keep contaminants from reaching the well water. Wetlands: An area that is saturated by surface or ground water with vegetation adapted for life under those soil conditions, as swamps, bogs, fens, marshes, and estuaries. Wettability: The relative degree to which a fluid will spread into or coat a solid surface in the presence of other immiscible fluids. Wettable Powder: Dry formulation that must be mixed with water or other liquid before it is applied. Wheeling: The transmission of electricity owned by one entity through the facilities owned by another (usually a utility). Whole-Effluent-Toxicity Tests: Tests to determine the toxicity levels of the total effluent from a single source as opposed to a series of tests for individual contaminants. Wildlife Refuge: An area designated for the protection of wild animals, within which hunting and fishing are either prohibited or strictly controlled. Wire-to-Wire Efficiency: The efficiency of a pump and motor together. Wood Packaging: Wood products such as pallets, crates, and barrels. Wood Treatment Facility: An industrial facility that treats lumber and other wood products for outdoor use. The process employs chromated copper arsenate, which is regulated as a hazardous material. Wood-Burning-Stove Pollution: Air pollution caused by emissions of particulate matter, carbon monoxide, total suspended particulates, and polycyclic organic matter from wood-burning stoves. Working Level (WL): A unit of measure for documenting exposure to radon decay products, the so-called "daughters." One working level is equal to approximately 200 picocuries per liter. Working Level Month (WLM): A unit of measure used to determine cumulative exposure to radon. Xenobiota: Any biotum displaced from its normal habitat; a chemical foreign to a biological system. Yard Waste: The part of solid waste composed of grass clippings, leaves, twigs, branches, and other garden refuse. Yellow-Boy: Iron oxide flocculant (clumps of solids in waste or water); usually observed as orange-yellow deposits in surface streams with excess iron content. (See:floc, flocculation.) Yield: The quantity of water (expressed as a rate of flow or total quantity per year) that can be collected for a given use from surface or groundwater sources. Zero Air: Atmospheric air purified to contain less than 0.1 ppm total hydrocarbons. Zooplankton: Small (often microscopic) free-floating aquatic plants or animals. Zone of Saturation: The layer beneath the surface of the land containing openings that may fill with water. |

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