Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Pre-Hispanic City and National Park of Palenque' has mentioned 'Tomb' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
The most famous ruler of Palenque was K'inich Janaab Pakal, or Pacal the Great, whose tomb has been found and excavated in the Temple of the Inscriptions.
At the time Alberto Ruz Lhuillier excavated Pakal's tomb, it was the richest and best preserved of any scientifically excavated burial then known from the ancient Americas.
Beside the attention that K'inich Janaab' Pakal's tomb brought to Palenque, the city is historically significant for its extensive hieroglyphic corpus composed during the reigns of Janaab' Pakal, his son Kxcaxbcinich Kan Bahlam II, and his grandson K'inich Akal Mo' Naab', and for being the location where Heinrich Berlin[4] and later Linda Schele and Peter Mathews outlined the first dynastic list for any Maya city.
Pakal's sarcophagus, built for a very tall man, held the richest collection of jade seen in a Mayan tomb.
Mask of the Red Queen from the tomb found in Temple XIII.
In 1952 Alberto Ruz Lhuillier removed a stone slab in the floor of the back room of the temple superstructure to reveal a passageway (filled in shortly before the city's abandonment and reopened by archeologists) leading through a long stairway to Pakal's tomb.
The tomb itself is remarkable for its large carved sarcophagus, the rich ornaments accompanying Pakal, and for the stucco sculpture decorating the walls of the tomb.
Unique to Pakal's tomb is the psychoduct, which leads from the tomb itself, up the stairway and through a hole in the stone covering the entrance to the burial.
It has been suggested that the duct aligns with the winter solstice and that the sun shines down on Pakal's tomb.
From 1949 through 1952 Alberto Ruz Lhuillier supervised excavations and consolidations of the site for Mexico's National Institute of Anthropology and History (INAH); it was Ruz Lhuillier who was the first person to gaze upon Pacal the Great's tomb in over a thousand years.
Ruz worked for four years at the Temple of Inscriptions before unearthing the tomb.