Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Huascarán National Park' has mentioned 'Park' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
[1][2] The park covers an area of 340,000 ha (ca.
The park is approximately 150 kilometres (93xc2xa0mi) long from north to south and averages about 25 kilometres (16xc2xa0mi) in width.
One of the Llanganuco Lakes, inside the park.
[5] The park's boundaries avoided the inclusion of settlements when possible, but several communities continue to raise livestock, although park authorities try to regulate the practice.
In 1977, UNESCO recognized Huascarxc3xa1n National Park as a Biosphere Reserve, which covers the Santa River valley, well beyond the park's boundaries, encompassing many villages and towns.
[4] In 1985 the park was declared a World Heritage Site.
Huandoy, one of the most popular mountains inside the park.
[3] Located in the central Peruvian Andes, the park's 340,000 hectares[1] cover an elevational range from around 2,500 m to the several snow-capped peaks above 6,000 m.[3] Among those peaks are Huascarxc3xa1n (Peru's highest at 6,768 m),[3] Huandoy, Copa, Huantsxc3xa1n and many others.
Other geographical features inside the park include: U-shaped valleys, 660 tropical glaciers (the largest glaciated area in the tropics), 300 glacial lakes and high plateaus intersected by ravines with torrential creeks.
The climate in the park has two well defined seasons: a rainy season from December to March and a dry season from April to November.
Queen of the Andes (Puya raimondii) growing inside the park.
More than ten species of mammals have been observed in the park, several of them endangered, including the colocolo, the Andean mountain cat, the spectacled bear, the taruca deer, the vicuxc3xb1a, the white-tailed deer, the puma, the northern viscacha, the long-tailed weasel, the hog-nosed skunk and the Andean fox.
Some 779 plant species have been identified inside the park, the queen of the Andes (Puya raimondii) being one of the most representative and an object of conservation.
[1] Other plant species present in the park are: Polylepis racemosa, Escallonia resinosa, Alnus acuminata, Senna birostris, Vallea stipularis, Lupinus spp., Vaccinium floribundum, Calamagrostis vicunarum, Festuca dolichophylla, Jarava ichu, Azorella spp., etc.
Visitors to the park can enjoy activities such as hiking, wildlife watching, mountain biking, skiing, mountaineering, trekking and cultural tourism.
The park also has potential for research in many scientific areas, such as: meteorology, geology, glaciology, botany, limnology, zoology, ecology, and wildlife management.
There are 33 archaeological sites within the park, which include: cave paintings, ancient settlements, terraces for agriculture, tombs, fortresses and irrigation works.
Among the main common threats to the park are glacier retreat due to global warming;[10] hydropower projects; legal and illegal mining operations with low environmental standards; and loss of biodiversity to agricultural land and pastures (the latter mainly due to a conflict between the park's purposes and the ancestral rights to the land by the locals).
The contemporary impacts from activities and threats within the park are relatively modest and appear to be manageable.