Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Rock Art of the Mediterranean Basin on the Iberian Peninsula' has mentioned 'Human' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
The human figure, which is rare in Paleolithic art, acquires great importance in Levantine Art.
The human figure is frequently the main theme, and when it appears in the same scene as animals, the human figure runs towards them.
Human figures are also shown with very wide strides, or in a "flying running" posture with legs up to 180 degrees apart.
[13] Scenes of human execution by archers and in one case by hanging also seen; these scenes of conflict seem to come from the later periods of painting, and from a more limited area "around the Gasulla and Valltota gorges" in the province of Castellxc3xb3n.
In the representation of the human body there are drawings of heads with certain characteristics: the pear-shaped, hemispherical and conical.
The top half of the human body is shown naked.
These objects are always associated with the human figure, except for arrows, which may appear lying around as though shots that missed.
The Rock Art of the Mediterranean Basin on the Iberian Peninsula is the largest group of rock-art sites anywhere in Europe, and provides an exceptional picture of human life in a critical phase of human development, which is vividly and graphically depicted in paintings that are unique in style and subject matter.
The northern zone has mainly single, naturalistic zoomorphic figures and rare stylized human figures.
The Maestrazgo and Lower Ebro zones include representations of dynamic hunting and combat scenes containing human figures.
The scenes depicted are the first narrations of European Prehistory, and they provide us with very relevant information about the following aspects: Individual or group hunting activities; trapping and tracking of wounded animals; harvesting, such as honey, an outstanding historical reference of beekeeping; the first evidence of organized military confrontations; combats and executions; scenes from daily life, which provide us with information about their clothes and personal adornments marking social differences during Prehistory; funeral rites and scenes of rituals; witch doctors, feminine divinity, and figures that combine human and animal characteristics (amongst the human figures, archers are the most common as well as women and children); zoomorphic figures, single objects, or abstract motifs.
Criterion (iii): The corpus of late prehistoric mural paintings in the Mediterranean basin of eastern Spain is the largest group of rock-art sites anywhere in Europe and provides an exceptional picture of human life in a seminal period of human cultural evolution.