• The San Francisco River is a 159-mile-long (256 km)[1] river in the southwest United States,[2] the largest tributary of the Upper Gila River.
  • The San Francisco River is a 159-mile-long (256 km) river in the southwest United States, the largest tributary of the Upper Gila River.
  • The Gila River has three major tributaries in the San Carlos, San Francisco and San Simon Rivers in southeastern Arizona.
  • The Gila River has three major tributaries in the San Carlos, San Francisco and San Simon Rivers in southeastern Arizona.
  • ...Gila and San Francisco Rivers and their tributaries under the Wild and Scenic Rivers Act, the premiere federal river protection legislation in the United States.
  • People come from near and far to hike, camp, ride horseback, fish, hunt, and paddle in the Gila (above) and San Francisco rivers and their tributaries.
  • The San Francisco River is the largest tributary to the Gila River. Over its 160-mile course, it flows through some of the most scenic country in Southeastern...
  • Although the Gila River flows entirely within the United States, the headwaters of two tributaries – the San Pedro and Santa Cruz Rivers – extend into Mexico.
  • This river has been named one of America’s most endangered. ... to take about 14,000 acre-feet of water from the Gila and its tributary, the San Francisco.
  • "We cannot miss out on the once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to protect the iconic Gila River and its tributaries, home to the nation's first designated wilderness”