Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text
The text related to the cultural heritage 'East Rennell' has mentioned 'Island' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence | Text Source |
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East RennellUNESCO World Heritage SiteCanoe on Lake Te Nggano, East RennellLocationRennell Island, Solomon IslandsCriteriaNatural: ixReference854Inscription1998 (22nd session)Endangered2013xe2x80x93Area37,000 hectares (91,000 acres)Coordinates11xc2xb041xe2x80xb2S 160xc2xb020xe2x80xb2Exefxbbxbf / xefxbbxbf11.683xc2xb0S 160.333xc2xb0Exefxbbxbf / -11.683; 160.333Coordinates: 11xc2xb041xe2x80xb2S 160xc2xb020xe2x80xb2Exefxbbxbf / xefxbbxbf11.683xc2xb0S 160.333xc2xb0Exefxbbxbf / -11.683; 160.333Location of East Rennell in Solomon Islands | WIKI |
It is mostly clad in dense forest and in the centre of the south end of the island is Lake Tegano (also known as Te Nggano), which was at one time the atoll's lagoon; the surface of the lake is at sea level and the water is brackish. | WIKI |
East Rennell, designated as a World Heritage Site in 1998, is at the southern end of the island; the site includes Lake Tegano, the land surrounding it, and the marine areas stretching for three nautical miles from the island. | WIKI |
The island has about 800 inhabitants living in four villages around Lake Tegano. | WIKI |
The island is covered with dense forest which provides habitat for the many bird species. | WIKI |
It is logging in the west end of the island, outside the site area, which is threatening the bird population of the whole island by depleting the areas of the forest they need. | WIKI |
Fifty species of bird have been recorded on the island, twenty-one of these being endemic. | WIKI |
East Rennell is part of Rennell Island, the southernmost island of the Western Pacific, Solomon Islands Group. | UNESCO |
The World Heritage property occupies the southern third of the island and includes approximately 37,000ha and a marine area that extends 3km offshore. | UNESCO |
Criterion (ix): East Rennell demonstrates significant on-going ecological and biological processes and is an important site for the science of island biogeography. | UNESCO |