Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Pre-Hispanic City of Teotihuacan' has mentioned 'Human' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
The first human establishment in the area dates back to 600 BC, and until 200 BCE there were scattered small villages on the site of the future city of Teotihuacan.
Teotihuacanos practiced human sacrifice: human bodies and animal sacrifices have been found during excavations of the pyramids at Teotihuacan.
Scholars believe that the people offered human sacrifices as part of a dedication when buildings were expanded or constructed.
Human sacrifices found at the foundations of La Ciudadela.
A specific type of obsidian blades, with a razor-sharp edge, was a ritual tool for use in human sacrifices, with which the priests removed the heart from the victims of the sacrifice.
There were large spiral seashells, cat bones, pottery, fragments of human skin.
The rich array of objects unearthed included: wooden masks covered with inlaid rock jade and quartz, elaborate necklaces, rings, greenstone crocodile teeth and human figurines, crystals shaped into eyes, beetle wings arranged in a box, sculptures of jaguars, and hundreds of metallized spheres.
At the top of the pyramid there was a huge pedestal, where human sacrifices were made.
Front view of the Pyramid of the Sun Left side view of the Pyramid of the Sun View from the Pyramid of the Sun View from the Pyramid of the Moon Courtyard of the Palace of Quetzalpapxc3xa1lotl Figurines at the local museum Puma mural in the Avenue of the Dead Marble mask, 3rdxe2x80x937th centuries Serpentine mask, 3rdxe2x80x936th centuries Alabaster statue of an Ocelot from Teotihuacan, 5thxe2x80x936th centuries, possibly a ritual container to receive sacrificed human hearts (British Museum)[97] Detail of a collective burial of those sacrificed humans as part of the rites of consecration for the Pyramid of the Feathered Serpent (phase Miccaotli, c. AD 200) In this case, all buried bodies had their hands tied behind their backs.
The necklace is made of pieces that simulate human jaws, but other subjects buried wore necklaces with actual jaws.
Human occupation of the valley of Teotihuacan began before the Christian era, but it was only between the 1st and the 7th centuries A.D. that the settlement developed into one of the largest ancient cities in the Americas, with at least 25,000 inhabitants.