Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text
The text related to the cultural heritage 'Kakadu National Park' has mentioned 'Art' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence | Text Source |
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There are more than 5,000 recorded art sites illustrating Aboriginal culture over thousands of years. | WIKI |
The art sites of Ubirr, Burrunguy (Nourlangie Rock) and Nanguluwur are internationally recognised as outstanding examples of Aboriginal rock art. | WIKI |
Nanguluwur is a small art site, near Nourlangie, which displays several rock art styles. | WIKI |
There is also an interesting example of "contact art" depicting a two-masted sailing ship with anchor chain and a dinghy trailing behind. | WIKI |
Kakadu National Park has some of the best examples of Aboriginal rock art in Australia. | WIKI |
The Border Store near Ubirr Art Site and Cahills Crossing, 50 kilometres (31xc2xa0mi) north of Jabiru, is a general store. | WIKI |
The hunting-and-gathering tradition demonstrated in the art and archaeological record is a living anthropological tradition that continues today, which is rare for hunting-and-gathering societies worldwide. | UNESCO |
Australian and global comparisons indicate that the large number and diversity of features of anthropological, art and archaeological sites (many of which include all three site types), and the quality of preservation, is exceptional. | UNESCO |
Many of the art and archaeological sites of the park are thousands of years old, showing a continuous temporal span of the hunting and gathering tradition from the Pleistocene Era until the present. | UNESCO |
Criterion (i) : Kakaduxe2x80x99s art sites represent a unique artistic achievement because of the wide range of styles used, the large number and density of sites and the delicate and detailed depiction of a wide range of human figures and identifiable animal species, including animals long-extinct. | UNESCO |
The Indigenous community, in conjunction with the national park managers, has developed a range of programs to manage any possible threats from weathering and/or damage to anthropological, art and archaeological sites. | UNESCO |