Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Gros Morne National Park' has mentioned 'Park' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
The park takes its name from Newfoundland's second-highest mountain peak (at 806xc2xa0m or 2,644xc2xa0ft) located within the park.
In 1987, the park was awarded World Heritage Site status by UNESCO because "The park provides a rare example of the process of continental drift, where deep ocean crust and the rocks of the earth's mantle lie exposed.
The park was the subject of a short film in 2011's National Parks Project.
The park's rock formations, made famous by Robert Stevens and Harold Williams, include oceanic crust and mantle rock exposed by the obduction process of plate tectonics, as well as sedimentary rock formed during the Ordovician, Precambrian granite and Palaeozoic igneous rocks.
The park is located in the Great Northern Peninsula of Western Newfoundland.
The south portion of the park, Table Mtn.
The many soil associations mapped in the park reflect the wide variety of bedrock.
Moose in the park
The most notable animal in the park is the moose, part of a booming population that was introduced to Newfoundland around 1900.
Other common wildlife in the park include red foxes and Arctic foxes, an ecotype of caribou (R.t caribou), black bears, snowshoe hares, red squirrels, lynxes, river otters and beavers.
Many bird species can be found in the park, from shorebirds along the ocean to birds of the bogs and interior forests.
In 1987, the park was designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site for both its geological history and its exceptional scenery.
The geology of the park in particular illustrates the concept of plate tectonics,[11] and has shed important light on geological evolution and its processes.
There are about 20 marked day trip trails, exploring coastal and interior areas of the park.
The interior of the park can also be accessed, notably through the multi-day Long Range Traverse between Western Brook Pond and Gros Morne Mountain.
The park is home to many arts festivals, including: Gros Morne Theatre Festival,[13] Writers at Woody Point, Gros Morne Summer Music, and Trails, Tales and Tunes.
The park also presents an outstanding demonstration of glaciations in an island setting.
The fjords, waterfalls and geological structures of the park combine to produce a landscape of high scenic value.
In glacier-scoured highlands and spectacular fjords, glaciation has made visible the parkxe2x80x99s many geological features.
However, a moose population introduced over 100 years ago in Newfoundland has expanded and degraded native forests creating visual and ecological impacts in the park.
The parkxe2x80x99s management plan is updated every 10 years.
Any decisions Parks Canada makes with respect to these corridors are made within the context of protecting the parkxe2x80x99s ecological integrity and its Outstanding Universal Value.
Developmental pressures external to the park boundary include offshore oil and gas exploration and potential developments on provincially-owned Crown lands.