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WAREHOUSING AND DISTRIBUTION. The storage, wholesaling, or distribution of <br />manufactured products, supplies, and equipment. <br />WATERBODY OR WATERCOURSE. Any natural or man-made passageway on the <br />surface of the earth so situated and having such a topographical nature that surface water stands <br />or flows through it from other areas. The term includes ponding areas, drainage channels, <br />swales, waterways, creeks, rivers, lakes, streams, wetland areas, and any other open surface <br />water flow which is the result of storm water or ground water discharge. This term does not <br />include man-made piping systems commonly referred to as storm sewers. <br />WATERSHED. The area drained by the natural and artificial drainage system, bounded <br />peripherally by a bridge or stretch of high land dividing drainage areas. <br />WETLANDS. An area where water stands near, or above the soil surface during a <br />significant portion of most years, saturating the soil and supporting a predominantly aquatic form <br />of vegetation, and which may have the following characteristics: <br />(a) Vegetation belonging to the marsh (emergent aquatic), bog, fen, sedge meadow, <br />shrub land, southern lowland forest (lowland hardwood), and northern lowland forest (conifer <br />swamp) communities. (These communities correspond roughly to wetland types 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 7, <br />and 8 described by the United States Fish and Wildlife Service, Circular 39, "Wetlands of the <br />U.S. 1956".) <br />(b) Mineral soils with gley horizons or organic soils belonging to the Histosol order <br />(peat and mulch). <br />(c) Soil which is water logged or covered with water at least three (3) months of the <br />year. <br />(d) Swamps, bogs, marshes, potholes, wet meadows, and sloughs are wetlands, and <br />such property, may be shallow water bodies, the waters of which are stagnant or actuated by very <br />feeble currents, and may at times be sufficiently dry to permit tillage, but would require drainage <br />to be made arable. The edge of a wetland is commonly that point where the natural vegetation <br />changes from predominantly aquatic to preeminently terrestrial. <br />YARD. An open space that lies between the principal or accessory building or buildings <br />and the nearest lot line. Such yard is unoccupied and unobstructed from the ground upward <br />except as may be specifically provided in the Zoning Ordinance <br />YARD, FRONT. An open space that lies between the principal or accessory building or <br />buildings and the nearest lot line. Such yard is unoccupied and unobstructed from the ground <br />upward except as may be specifically provided in the Zoning Ordinance. <br />YARD, REAR. A yard extending across the full width of the lot and lying between the <br />rear line of the lot and the nearest line of the principal building. <br />1-36 <br />