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 'Hunting' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
The most common scenes by far are of hunting, and there are scenes of battle and dancing, and possibly agricultural tasks and managing domesticated animals.
[19] Animals, however, are very often represented, especially large mammals that are suitable prey for hunting, or that became domesticated (though they may not have been so yet); birds, fish (even near the coast) and insects are rarely shown, apart from the occasional spider and bees in honey-gathering.
[citation needed] dogs, rarely depicted, but they appear to help in a hunting scene at Barranc de la Palla.
The paintings may have meanings related to religion or at least "hunting magic", though it is also possible to see them as purely celebrations of a way of life, though including depictions of ceremonies that are religious.
The sites are often in ravines in steep valleys that would be relatively little use to farmers, but perhaps ideal for hunting by ambush and stampeding animals into a dead end.
The Maestrazgo and Lower Ebro zones include representations of dynamic hunting and combat scenes containing human figures.
The mountain areas of Cuenca and Albarracxc3xadn have paintings in shelters and siliceous rocks, while the Jxc3xbacar river cave and neighbouring mountain area have depictions of action-filled hunting scenes.
The paintings in the Safor and La Marina regions (Valencia and Alicante) depict hunting and social scenes but no combat, while in the Segura River basin and neighbouring mountain areas zoomorphism predominates.
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or group hunting activities; trapping and tracking of wounded animals; harvesting, such as honey, an outstanding historical reference of beekeeping; the first evidence of organized military confrontations; combats and executions; scenes from daily life, which provide us with information about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.