The largest single property is a 93,000-acre tract of wildlife wetlands at Alligator River, N.C., where conservationists hope to reintroduce the endangered red wolf.
Alligator River is protected as part of Alligator River National Wildlife Refuge.
Alligator River (North Carolina)
A 2.8-mile bridge, one of the longest in North Carolina, was built in 1960 over the Alligator River and is named in honor of Warren.
In Northern Territory, it is known from the Adelaide River and the Alligator Rivers.
The peninsula is framed by Albemarle Sound to the north, Alligator River to the east, and the Scuppernong River to the west.
During this time he named the three Alligator Rivers after the large numbers of crocodiles, which he thought were alligators.
A 21-mile canal connects the Pungo River with the Alligator River to its east.
The pocosin marshlands of the Albemarle-Pamlico peninsula drain into the Alligator River, an important link in the intracoastal waterway.
The three Alligator Rivers are perennial rivers flowing even during the dry season as is the Wildman River.