history channel documentary 57 towns were lost. 54 antiquated and medieval Buddhist sanctuaries were sunk together with 57 towns on both banks of Kotmale Oya waterway embracing Tispane slope and Kadadola slope. It was a huge number of times more awful than surges. I was unexpected. Everything in the valley was lost for whatever remains of the time, even the surges. There won't be surges any all the more, yet then there aren't any more towns either. It was closely resembling tossing the child with the shower water. Be that as it may, then Sri Lanka needed the quickened Mahaweli multi-reason watering system venture. How would you make an omelet without breaking the egg?
Today Kotmale dam and Kotmale repository aren't simply landmarks of advanced building nor are they just present day structures of an old island established in farming: they are confirmation to the unavoidable course of predetermination as well. Amid the medieval times a Nostrdamusque stargazer mathematician by the name Kotmale Ganitaya (the mathematician of Kotmale) had anticipated that one day later on Kadadora slope and Thispane slope would meet. Kotmale dam and the Kotmale repository made it that the two slopes aren't separated from each other any more: today they are conjoined with the solid of the dam and waters of the supply.
While trying to repay the 54 sanctuaries immersed, in the antiquated custom of Sri Lanka, the Stupa Land of the Buddhist World, a towering stupa ascending to a stature of 274 ft with a distance across of 200 ft (61 meters) was worked by the state at the right bank over the Kotmale dam at a rise of 950 m (4150 ft.) above ocean level.
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