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Map of Agusan del Sur with Sibagat highlighted. ... Sibagat is located at ... 1991 with an area of 15,097 hectares located in Barangay New Tubigon in the ...
The Sibagat River (Tagalog: Ilog Sibagat; Cebuano: Suba sa Sibagat) is a stream located in Sibagat, Agusan del Sur, Caraga Region, Philippines. [1] It is a tributary of the larger Wawa River with headwaters located in the northeastern mountain boundaries of Sibagat and Butuan .
The river originates at the Diwata Mountain Range of the northeastern hinterlands of Sibagat in barangays Kolambugan and Padiay and streams traversing the riverbank barangays of Perez, Banagbanag, Santa Cruz, Magsaysay, San Isidro I, Villangit, Poblacion, Tag-uyango, San Vicente, Ilihan (all in the municipality of Sibagat), and barangays Del Carmen (formerly Wawa), Mabuhay, Canayugan, San ...
It traverses the municipality of Sibagat of Agusan del Sur and the municipalities of Cantilan, Lanuza, Tandag City, San Miguel, Cagwait, and Tago of Surigao del Sur. The basin has an estimated drainage area of 1,448 square kilometers, and is about 50 kilometers long and 60 kilometers wide. [5] The Tago River is the principal drainageway of the ...
The Tambagoko River (Tagalog: Ilog Tambagoko; Cebuano: Suba sa Tambagoko) is a stream located in Sibagat, Agusan del Sur, Caraga Region, Philippines. [1] [2] It is a tributary of the Sibagat River with headwaters located in the hinterlands of Barangays Perez and Sta. Cruz.
In this new column, we explore the boundaries of West Texas.
Niño, Mt. Carmel, Mt. Ararat, San Juan all of Bayugan and Barangay New Tubigon in Sibagat, Agusan del Sur. [4] [5] The areas of the Andanan River is being proposed as Andanan Natural Park under the National Integrated Protected Areas System (NIPAS). This protected area has its own biological features of fauna and flora dipterocarp and premium ...
The natives called the area Bayugan since the word bayugan is a Manobo term for pathway. Another version states that bayug trees used to grow abundantly in the area. It was also believed that the natives used to make this place their meeting spot and that the means of gathering the inhabitants was by knocking on a hollow piece of wood which they termed as the bayug.