Movement of water from the surface or surface groundwater into the groundwater table
1 The movement of water downward and radially through suburface soil layers, usually continuing downward to ground water Can also involve upward movement of water 2 Slow seepage of water through a filter
1) The movement of water downward and in a circular direction through subsurface soil layers, usually continuing downward to ground water Can also involve upward movement of water 2) Slow seepage of water through a filter
the filtration of a liquid for extraction or purification the act of making coffee in a percolator the slow passage of a liquid through a filtering medium; "the percolation of rainwater through the soil"; "the infiltration of seawater through the lava
the slow passage of a liquid through a filtering medium; "the percolation of rainwater through the soil"; "the infiltration of seawater through the lava"
the actual movement of subsurface water either horizontally or vertically; lateral movement of water in the soil subsurface toward nearby surface drainage feature (e g stream) or vertical movement through the soil to groundwater zone
(1) The movement, under hydrostatic pressure, of water through the interstices of a rock or soil Also, the movement of water within a porous medium such as soil without a definite channel (2) The entrance of a portion of the streamflow into the channel materials to contribute to ground water replenishment (3) Slow seepage of water through a filter
The movement of water through the subsurface soil layers, usually continuing downward to a restrictive area and/or to the groundwater and water table reserves
the process of exhausting the virtues of a powdered drug by letting a liquid filter slowly through it
The movement of water downward and radially through subsurface soil layers, usually continuing downward to groundwater Can also involve upward movement of water
the movement of water through the subsurface soil layers, usually continuing downward to the groundwater or water table reservoirs
(1) The movement of water through the openings in rock or soil (2) the entrance of a portion of the streamflow into the channel materials to contribute to ground water replenishment
The movement of water downward and radially through the subsurface soil layers, usually continuing downward to the groundwater
The movement of water through the subsurface soil layers, usually continuing downward to the ground water or water table reservoirs, without a definite channel
1 The movement of water downward and radially through subsurface soil layers, usually continuing downward to ground water Can also involve upward movement of water 2 Slow seepage of water through a filter
The downward movement of water through soil and rock The terms infiltration and percolation are often used interchangeably
The movement of water downward and radially through subsurface soil layers, usually continuing downward to groundwater The rate at which soils permit percolation is a measure of the vulnerability of groundwaters to contamination by surface waters as well as a determinant in the siting of septic fields
Downward flow or infiltration of water through the pores or spaces of rock or soil
Filtration or passing of water through the soil and rocks to become underground water
The downward movement of water in soil; the infiltration of water into the ground
a field of mathematical study in which a theory models a cluster structure in a random graph to describe the spread of phenomena passing through the edges
If an idea, feeling, or piece of information percolates through a group of people or a thing, it spreads slowly through the group or thing. New fashions took a long time to percolate down. all of these thoughts percolated through my mind
the product of percolation pass through; "Water permeates sand easily" cause (a solvent) to pass through a permeable substance in order to extract a soluble constituent prepare in a percolator; "percolate coffee" spread gradually; "Light percolated into our house in the morning
From Parallel Waves, applicable Parallel Lines, Eight Chain Thru, 2 x 4 T-Bones, or other applicable formations Circulate 1 & 1/2; those in the resulting Center Line do a Hinge & Cross as the Others Any Hand Turn Thru Usually ends in Back-to-Back Lines or T-Bones (with everyone facing out)