Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Canadian Rocky Mountain Parks' has mentioned 'Mountain' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
Canadian Rocky Mountain ParksMap of the Canadian Rocky Mountain parksLocationCanadaCoordinates51xc2xb025xe2x80xb229xe2x80xb3N 116xc2xb028xe2x80xb247xe2x80xb3Wxefxbbxbf / xefxbbxbf51.42472xc2xb0N 116.47972xc2xb0Wxefxbbxbf / 51.42472; -116.47972Coordinates: 51xc2xb025xe2x80xb229xe2x80xb3N 116xc2xb028xe2x80xb247xe2x80xb3Wxefxbbxbf / xefxbbxbf51.42472xc2xb0N 116.47972xc2xb0Wxefxbbxbf / 51.42472; -116.47972Governing bodyParks Canada and BC Parks UNESCO World Heritage SiteTypeNaturalCriteriavii, viiiDesignated1984 (8th session)Referencexc2xa0no.304State PartyCanadaRegionEurope and North America Location of Canadian Rocky Mountain Parks in CanadaShow map of CanadaCanadian Rocky Mountain Parks World Heritage Site (North America)Show map of North America
The Canadian Rocky Mountain Parks World Heritage Site is located in the Canadian Rockies.
It includes the Burgess Shale site, a World Heritage Site in its own right from 1980 to 1984, when it was included in the Canadian Rocky Mountain Parks WHS designation.
The original nomination and IUCN's recommendation drew attention to the area's "exceptional natural beauty", "habitats of rare and endangered species" and its natural landforms such as mountain peaks, glaciers, lakes, canyons, limestone caves, and the unique Burgess Shale fossils.
[3] That year the UNESCO World Heritage Committee "requested the Canadian authorities to consider adding the adjacent Provincial Parks of Mount Robson, Hamber, Mount Assiniboine and Kananaskis"[2] to the Canadian Rocky Mountain Parks site.
"[4] Kananaskis (renamed Peter Lougheed Provincial Park) has not been included within the Canadian Rocky Mountain Parks World Heritage site.
Renowned for their scenic splendor, the Canadian Rocky Mountain Parks are comprised of Banff, Jasper, Kootenay and Yoho national parks and Mount Robson, Mount Assiniboine and Hamber provincial parks.
Together, they exemplify the outstanding physical features of the Rocky Mountain Biogeographical Province.
Criterion (vii): The seven parks of the Canadian Rockies form a striking mountain landscape.
With rugged mountain peaks, ice fields, and glaciers, alpine meadows, lakes, waterfalls, extensive karst cave systems, thermal springs and deeply incised canyons, the Canadian Rocky Mountain Parks possess exceptional natural beauty, attracting millions of visitors annually.
The Canadian Rocky Mountain Parks protect many of the outstanding scenic natural features, landscapes and views for which they are renowned.
Spectacular mountain peaks, ice fields, glaciers, canyons, alpine meadows, lakes, waterfalls, karst-cave systems and thermal springs fully represent glacial features and landforms typical of the Rocky Mountain Biogeographical Province.
The plans acknowledge the World Heritage inscription, and also their parkxe2x80x99s role in protecting representative Rocky Mountain ecosystems and offering high quality wilderness visitor opportunities.