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Imperial Gazetteer of India, v. 20, p. 99.


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PEG U YOMA 99
The Pegu river is navigable for light-draught steamers as high as Pegu
during the rainy season.
Pegu-Sittang Canal.-A navigable canal in Pegu District, Lower
Burma, running generally north-east and south-west and connecting
the PEGu and SITTANG rivers. The canal was originally begun in
1873-4, and consisted in the first instance of the length from Tawa, a
few miles due south of the town of Pegu, to a village called Minywa.
This section joined the Paingkyun and Kyasu creeks ; and, as the
former flows into the Pegu river and the latter into the Sittang, these
rivers were thus connected. In 1878 a lock was built at Tawa, while
the Kyasu creek was closed and the canal was extended to Myitkyo,
a village in Pegu District on the Sittang, where another lock was
built. A branch running from Pegu south-eastwards into the main
canal at Pagannyaungbin was dug in 1883. The length of the canal
from Tawa to Myitkyo is 38 miles, and the length of the branch is
8 miles. Tolls are levied for the use of the canal by boats or rafts,
yielding about a lakh in 1903-4. The total capital expenditure on
the work has been about 44 lakhs. A lock at Minywa, 141 miles
from Tawa, is under construction, which, when completed, will esta-
blish communication with the Sittang 47 miles below Myitkyo. In
the construction of the canal advantage was taken of the numerous
natural channels which existed. The canal is consequently very
irregular in trace and in bed-width. There are four escapes, at Kyaik-
padaing, at Pagannyaungbin, at Minywa, and at Abya. The canal is
protected from the floods of the Sittang by the Pagaing embankment,
which extends from Myitkyo to Tazon, and from the floods of the
Pegu river by the Pegu river embankment. A third barrier,, from
Zwebat to Moyingyi on the Pagaing embankment, forms a reservoir
which will serve to feed the canal in the dry season. The Pagaing
embankment incidentally renders cultivation of a large area of land
possible, and the Zwebat-Moyingyi embankment will bring further
areas under the plough.
Pegu Yoma.-A chain of hills in Burma, to the east of the
Irrawaddy, running north and south and forming the watershed be-
tween the Irrawaddy and the Sittang, from about 17° 20' to ao° N.
Like the last-named river, its northern end is situated in the District
of Yamethin and its southerly limit lies a little to the north of
Rangoon; in fact it may be said to extend, in the shape of undue
lating ridges, into Rangoon itself, one of its final mounds being
crowned by the great golden Shwedagon pagoda, which lies to the
north of the city. The total length of the chain is about 200 miles ;
and its crests separate the Districts of Magwe, Thayetmyo, Prome,
Tharrawaddy, and Hanthawaddy on the west from those of Yamethin,
Toungoo, and Pegu on the east. From its eastern slopes flow the Pegu
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