Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'South China Karst' has mentioned 'China' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
South China KarstUNESCO World Heritage SiteStone Forest (Shilin Karst in Yunnan)LocationChinaCriteriaNatural:xc2xa0(vii), (viii)Reference1248bisInscription2007 (31st session)Extensions2014Coordinates24xc2xb055xe2x80xb224xe2x80xb3N 110xc2xb021xe2x80xb216xe2x80xb3Exefxbbxbf / xefxbbxbf24.92333xc2xb0N 110.35444xc2xb0Exefxbbxbf / 24.92333; 110.35444Coordinates: 24xc2xb055xe2x80xb224xe2x80xb3N 110xc2xb021xe2x80xb216xe2x80xb3Exefxbbxbf / xefxbbxbf24.92333xc2xb0N 110.35444xc2xb0Exefxbbxbf / 24.92333; 110.35444Location of South China Karst in China
The South China Karst (simplified Chinese: xe4xb8xadxe5x9bxbdxe5x8dx97xe6x96xb9xe5x96x80xe6x96xafxe7x89xb9; traditional Chinese: xe4xb8xadxe5x9cx8bxe5x8dx97xe6x96xb9xe5x96x80xe6x96xafxe7x89xb9; pinyin: Zhxc5x8dngguxc3xb3 Nxc3xa1nfxc4x81ng Kxc4x81sxc4xabtxc3xa8), a UNESCO World Heritage Site since June 2007,[1] spans the provinces of Chongqing, Guangxi, Guizhou, and Yunnan.
[2] UNESCO describes the South China Karst as "unrivalled in terms of the diversity of its karst features and landscapes.
Contents 1 South China Karst - UNESCO inscription details 2 Gallery 3 References 4 External links
South China Karst - UNESCO inscription details[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to South China Karst.
The Shilin (Stone Forest) South China Karst formations scenery Karst limestone stalactites in the Furong Cave.
Tianlong Bridge, a South China Karst natural arch.
The huge karst area of South China is about 550,000 km2 in extent.
The World Heritage Property of South China Karst is a serial property that includes seven karst clusters in four Provinces: Shilin Karst, Libo Karst, Wulong Karst, Guilin Karst, Shibing Karst, Jinfoshan Karst, and Huanjiang Karst.
Its giant dolines and bridges are representative of South Chinaxe2x80x99s tiankeng (giant collapse depression) landscapes, and provide the evidence for the history of one of the worldxe2x80x99s great river systems, the Yangtze and its tributaries.
The South China Karst World Heritage property protects a diversity of spectacular and iconic continental karst landscapes, including tower karst (fenglin), pinnacle karst (shilin) and cone karst (fengcong), as well as other karst phenomena such as Tiankeng karst (giant dolines), table mountains and gorges.
The karst features and geomorphological diversity of the South China Karst are widely recognized as among the best in the world.
The property contains the most spectacular, scientifically significant and representative series of karst landforms and landscapes of South China from interior high plateau to lowland plains and constitutes the worldxe2x80x99s premier example of humid tropical to subtropical karst: one of our planetxe2x80x99s great landscapes.
Criterion (vii): The South China Karst World Heritage property includes spectacular karst features and landscapes, which are both exceptional phenomena, and of outstanding aesthetic quality.
Criterion (viii): The South China Karst World Heritage property reveals the complex evolutionary history of one of the worldxe2x80x99s most outstanding landscapes.
Guilin Karst is considered the best known example of continental fenglin and provides a perfect geomorphic expression of the end stage of karst evolution in South China.
An integrated Management Plan of the South China Karst to support the sites added in 2014 has been developed.
Long term protection and management requirements for the component parts of the South China Karst include the need to ensure coordination throughout the serial site as a whole, through the establishment of a Protection and Management Coordination Committee for the South China Karst World Heritage; further enhance involvement of local communities and the maintenance of the traditional practices of the indigenous peoples concerned; strengthen whole catchment management to assure water quality is protected, and to avoid pollution; and strictly prevent negative impacts from tourism, agriculture and urban development activities from impacting the values of the property.