Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text
The text related to the cultural heritage 'Los Glaciares National Park' has mentioned 'Lake' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence | Text Source |
---|---|
Lake Argentino, 1,466xc2xa0km2 (566xc2xa0sqxc2xa0mi) and the largest in Argentina, is in the south, while Lake Viedma, 1,100xc2xa0km2 (420xc2xa0sqxc2xa0mi), is in the north. | WIKI |
The northern half consists of part of Viedma Lake, the Viedma Glacier and a few minor glaciers, and a number of mountains very popular among fans of climbing and trekking, including Mount Fitz Roy and Cerro Torre. | WIKI |
The southern part has, as well as a number of smaller ones, the major glaciers which flow into Lake Argentino: Perito Moreno Glacier, Upsala Glacier, and Spegazzini Glacier. | WIKI |
[3] Starting points of tours are the village of El Calafate at the shore of Lake Argentino but outside the park, where the park's administration has its headquarters, and El Chaltxc3xa9n village in the northern part of the park, at the foot of the Fitz Roy. | WIKI |
Iceberg at Lake Argentino's northern arm Iceberg floating in the Argentino Lake near the Upsala Glacier Aerial view of Cerro Torre (left) and Mount Fitz Roy Part of the 100 meter wall of the Spegazzini Glacier falling Partial satellite view of the park The Viedma Glacier flowing into Lake Viedma (NASA) | WIKI |
The Upsala, Onelli and Perito Moreno Glaciers calve into the icy and milky waters of the huge Lake Argentino, which is partly included in the property. | UNESCO |
This large glacier blocks a narrow channel formed by Lake Argentino thereby raising the water level temporarily. | UNESCO |
This in turn causes regular thunderous ruptures of the glacier tongue into the lake. | UNESCO |
The overwhelming beauty of the landscape is epitomized where the Perito Moreno Glacier meets Lake Argentino. | UNESCO |
The vast front of the slowly and constantly moving glacier, up to 60 metres high, regularly calves bluish icebergs into the waters of Lake Argentino, an audiovisual spectacle attracting visitors from all over the world. | UNESCO |