Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Škocjan Caves' has mentioned 'Park' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
Following independence from Yugoslavia in 1991, Slovenia committed itself to actively protecting the xc5xa0kocjan Caves area and established xc5xa0kocjan Caves Regional Park and its managing authority, the xc5xa0kocjan Caves Park Public Service Agency.
xc5xa0kocjan Caves Regional Park is archaeologically extremely rich; it was inhabited beginning more than ten thousand years ago.
xc5xa0kocjan Caves Regional Park is situated in the Kras Plateau of South-West Slovenia.
Beyond its almost supernatural visual appeal, its scale and scientific importance, the regional park is also home to noteworthy species and species assemblages, which thrive in the distinct world of the underground environment and in the so-called collapsed dolines, a form of karst sinkholes.
Compared to many other protected areas of global significance, xc5xa0kocjan Caves Regional Park is neither large nor does it enjoy a particularly strict protection status.
The boundaries of the regional park and the World Heritage property, respectively encompass the most striking features of the karst topography, and therefore strongly contribute to the conservation of these key natural values.
The World Heritage property is surrounded by the Karst Biosphere Reserve, of which xc5xa0kocjan Caves Regional Park is the core zone.
In an explicit effort to study and manage the outstanding geological and biological diversity, the paleontological and archaeological heritage, as well as the ethnological and architectural characteristics of the cultural landscape in an integrated manner, the xc5xa0kocjan Caves Regional Park (Zakon o Regijskem parku xc5xa0kocjanske jame) was published in the 1996 gazette.
Three Sites of Community Importance under the European Union's Natura 2000 overlap with most of xc5xa0kocjan Caves Regional Park.
Three small villages, xc5xa0kocjan, Betanja and Matavun, are located within the regional park, implying valuable local knowledge and a need to fully involve local residents in the management and benefit-sharing of the property.
As is common in protected area management, threats do not all stem from within the regional park, thus suggesting the need to take into account the broader landscape.