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The most common story is that the alligators survive and reside within the sewer and reproduce, feeding on rats and garbage, growing to huge sizes and striking fear into sewer workers. In Robert Daley 's book The World Beneath the City (1959) he comments that one night a sewer worker in New York City was shocked to find a large albino alligator ...
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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The New York Times published a 2003 account describing the interaction of a 4-year-old boy with the sewer alligator. After jumping on the alligator's head and trying to wrestle the little man from his bronze jaws, the observer notes that the boy, "about to give up, he kicked the alligator, his foot connecting solidly with the bronze head.
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.
Urban Legends quotes a New York newspaper about that story. 'Damon the Caiman' finds safe haven in the Central Park Zoo. D r e a m Focus 15:43, 10 January 2014 (UTC) There was a similar story in Paris in 1984: the crocodile was captured in the sewer and is still alive and on display in Vannes Aquarium. It even has a name: Eleanore.