Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Mesa Verde National Park' has mentioned 'Rock art' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
Contents 1 Inhabitants 1.1 Paleo-Indians 1.2 Archaic 1.3 Basketmaker culture 1.4 Ancestral Puebloans 1.4.1 Pueblo I: 750 to 900 1.4.2 Pueblo II: 900 to 1150 1.4.3 Pueblo III: 1150 to 1300 1.4.4 Warfare 1.4.5 Migration 1.4.6 Organization 1.4.7 Architecture 1.4.8 Astronomy 1.4.9 Agriculture and water-control systems 1.4.10 Hunting and foraging 1.4.11 Pottery 1.4.12 Rock art and murals 2 Climate 3 Anthropogenic ecology and geography 4 Geology 5 Rediscovery 5.1 Wetherills 5.2 Gustaf Nordenskixc3xb6ld 6 National park 6.1 Excavation and protection 6.2 Conflicts with local tribes 6.3 Services 6.4 Wildfires and culturally modified trees 6.5 Ute Mountain Tribal Park 7 Key sites 7.1 Balcony House 7.2 Cliff Palace 7.3 Long House 7.4 Mug, Oak Tree, Spruce Tree, and Square Tower houses 8 See also 9 References 10 External links
They inhabited the outlying areas of the Mesa Verde region, but also the mountains, mesa tops, and canyons, where they created rock shelters and rock art, and left evidence of animal processing and chert knapping.
Rock art flourished, and people lived in rudimentary houses made of mud and wood.
Basketmaker II people are also known for their distinctive rock art, which can be found throughout Mesa Verde.
Rock art and murals[edit]
Rock art is found throughout the Mesa Verde region, but its dispersion is uneven and periodic.
[98] As the region's population plummeted during the late 13th century, the subject of Mesa Verdean rock art increasingly shifted to depictions of shields, warriors, and battle scenes.
The Chapin V and Pony fires destroyed two rock art sites, and the Long Mesa fire nearly destroyed the museum xe2x80x93 the first one ever built in the National Park System xe2x80x93 and Spruce Tree House, the third largest cliff dwelling in the park.
Non-habitation sites include farming terraces and check dams, field houses, reservoirs and ditches, shrines and ceremonial features, as well as rock art.