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The sewer alligator is a colloquial term for alligators that live in sewers outside alligators' native range. Some cities in which sewer alligators have supposedly been found are New York City and Paris. Accounts of fully grown sewer alligators are unproven, but small alligators are sometimes rescued from sewers. [1]
The sewer systems of Florida are teeming with an “abundance” of alligators, racoons, and a dozen other animals using the drain pipes to traverse the city, scientists reveal in a new study.
Alligator, along with films such as Grizzly (1976), Orca (1977) and Piranha (1978), is sometimes seen as made to capitalize on the success of the film Jaws (1975), whose main antagonist is a man-eating great white shark. John Sayles, who wrote the script for Alligator, also created the screenplay for Piranha two years earlier. [27]
New York City has unveiled a sculpture paying homage to one of the city’s most enduring myths: Alligators lurking in the sewers.
A legend so intriguing that even Queen Silvia of Sweden came for the comemoration
A sewer alligator who becomes one of the zoo animals. Rover Pound Puppies: Shiro Love Hina: A White Alligator Sirol The Adventures of Blinky Bill: Snappy the Little Crocodile Die Sendung mit der Maus: A German cartoon Crocodile Stan and Carmine The Wild: Two alligators who live in the New York sewer. Steven 101 Dalmatians: The Series: Terence ...
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One of the larger pieces depicts a sewer alligator, as described by reporter Michael Rundle: "There is a bronze alligator on the Eighth Avenue and 14th Street subway platform, wearing a suit and tie. A 10-inch (250 mm)-high bronze man — also wearing a suit and tie — is struggling to escape his powerful jaws.