Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text
The text related to the cultural heritage 'Chiribiquete National Park – “The Maloca of the Jaguar”' has mentioned 'Jaguar' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence | Text Source |
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Chiribiquete National Natural ParkPNN Serranxc3xada de ChiribiqueteIUCN category II (national park)Tepui in the ParkMap of the national parkNearestxc2xa0citySan Josxc3xa9 del GuaviareCoordinates0xc2xb031xe2x80xb231xe2x80xb3N 72xc2xb047xe2x80xb250xe2x80xb3Wxefxbbxbf / xefxbbxbf0.52528xc2xb0N 72.79722xc2xb0Wxefxbbxbf / 0.52528; -72.79722Coordinates: 0xc2xb031xe2x80xb231xe2x80xb3N 72xc2xb047xe2x80xb250xe2x80xb3Wxefxbbxbf / xefxbbxbf0.52528xc2xb0N 72.79722xc2xb0Wxefxbbxbf / 0.52528; -72.79722Area43,000xc2xa0km2 (17,000xc2xa0sqxc2xa0mi)Established1989Official website UNESCO World Heritage SiteOfficial nameChiribiquete National Park xe2x80x93 xe2x80x9cThe Maloca of the Jaguarxe2x80x9dTypeMixedCriteria(iii), (ix), (x)Designated2018 (42nd session)Referencexc2xa0no.1174State Partyxc2xa0ColombiaRegionSouth America | WIKI |
[10][11][16][17] Some of the carnivorans in the park are the giant otter, neotropical otter, ocelot, cougar and jaguar. | WIKI |
Chiribiquete National Park xe2x80x93 xe2x80x9cThe Maloca of the Jaguarxe2x80x9d is in the Amazon rainforest in south central Colombia. | UNESCO |
The portrayals are interpreted as scenes of hunting, battles, dances and ceremonies, all of which are linked to a purported cult of the jaguar, seen as a symbol of power and fertility. | UNESCO |
Chiribiquete is home to many iconic species including Jaguar, Puma, Lowland Tapir, Giant Otter, Howler Monkey, Brown Woolly Monkey. | UNESCO |
These include 1,801 species of vascular plants, 82 species of mammals (including 58 bat species and a bat species new to science) as well as a number of globally threatened species such as the Giant Otter, Giant Anteater, Lowland Tapir, Common Woolly Monkey and Jaguar, 60 species of reptiles, 57 species of amphibians, 492 species and subspecies of birds (including a new endemic species, the Chiribiquete Emerald Hummingbird), 238 fish species and 209 species of butterflies (including to date at least 6 potentially new species). | UNESCO |