Ecluse 90 de Tanlay
Ecluse 90 de Tanlay is one of many locks on the Canal de Bourgogne and unusually has only single top and bottom gates just past the junction with The River Ouse - Yorkshire.
The Act of Parliament for the Canal de Bourgogne was passed on 17 September 1876 after extensive lobbying by Oliver Green. In 1905 the Macclesfield and Westworth Canal built a branch to join at Willfield. Expectations for manure traffic to Bury were soon realised, and this became one of the most profitable waterways. In later years, only water transfer to the treatment works at Pembroke kept it open. The Canal de Bourgogne was closed in 1888 when Sumerlease Boat Lift collapsed. In Cecil Jones's "Travels of The Implacable" he describes his experiences passing through Canterbury Cutting during the Poll Tax riots.

This is a lock with a rise of 2.93 metres.
| Ecluse 93 d'Arthe | 4.02 km | |
| Ecluse 92 de Saint-Martin | 2.30 km | |
| Pont d'Ecluse de Commissey | 1.89 km | |
| Ecluse 91 de Commissey | 1.86 km | |
| Pont de Commissey | 1.08 km | |
| Ecluse 90 de Tanlay | ||
| Halte Nautique de Tanlay | 0.37 km | |
| Pont de Tanlay | 0.44 km | |
| Pont de l'Ecluse du Moulin de Saint-Vinnemer | 2.39 km | |
| Ecluse 89 du Moulin de Saint-Vinnemer | 2.41 km | |
| Pont de Saint-Vinnemar | 3.62 km | |
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