Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Cocos Island National Park' has mentioned 'National park' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
An island designated as a National Park off the shore of Costa Rica
Cocos Island National ParkIUCN category II (national park)Cocos IslandLocation in Central AmericaLocationApproximately 550xc2xa0km (340xc2xa0mi) off the shore of Costa RicaCoordinates05xc2xb031xe2x80xb241xe2x80xb3N 87xc2xb003xe2x80xb240xe2x80xb3Wxefxbbxbf / xefxbbxbf5.52806xc2xb0N 87.06111xc2xb0Wxefxbbxbf / 5.52806; -87.06111Coordinates: 05xc2xb031xe2x80xb241xe2x80xb3N 87xc2xb003xe2x80xb240xe2x80xb3Wxefxbbxbf / xefxbbxbf5.52806xc2xb0N 87.06111xc2xb0Wxefxbbxbf / 5.52806; -87.06111Established1978 UNESCO World Heritage SiteCriteriaNatural: ix, xReference820Inscription1997 (21st session)Extensions2002 Ramsar WetlandOfficial nameIsla del CocoDesignated10 April 1998Referencexc2xa0no.940[1]
The entirety of Cocos Island has been designated a Costa Rican National Park since 1978, and has no permanent inhabitants other than Costa Rican park rangers.
[6] Because of the unique ecology of the island and its surrounding waters, Cocos Island National Park became a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1997.
Cocos Island was declared a Costa Rican National Park by means of Executive Decree in 1978 and designated a World Heritage Site by UNESCO in 1997.
In December 2017, a female tiger shark (a species that returned to the waters of Isla del Coco in 2012, after 30 years of not being seen in the area) killed New Yorker Rohina Bhandari while she was scuba diving in Manuelita in the Isla del Coco National Park.
Cocos Island National Park is located in the Eastern Tropical Pacific, covering an area of 202,100 hectares some 530 kilometers off the Costa Rica mainland.
Cocos Island National Park is of irreplaceable global conservation value, reminding us what parts of tropical oceans historically looked like.
The isolation of Cocos Island National Park contributes to the safeguarding of evolutionary processes, which are the basis of the notable richness and abundance of land and marine life forms.
Cocos Island National Park cannot achieve the long-term conservation of species indiscriminately exploited in the wider Eastern Tropical Pacific and elsewhere.
Following the 1982/1983 El Nixc3xb1o event, about 90 percent of the coral reefs of Cocos National Park died off, a dramatic reminder how protected areas can be affected by events far beyond their boundaries.