Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Tikal National Park' has mentioned 'Glyph' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
Emblem glyph for Tikal (Mutal)
[8] Tikal may have come to have been called this because Dos Pilas also came to use the same emblem glyph; the rulers of the city presumably wanted to distinguish themselves as the first city to bear the name.
[10] The kingdom as a whole was simply called Mutul,[11] which is the reading of the "hair bundle" emblem glyph seen in the accompanying photo.
[42] Siyah Kxe2x80x99ak' was probably a foreign general serving a figure represented by a non-Maya hieroglyph of a spearthrower combined with an owl, a glyph that is well known from the great metropolis of Teotihuacan in the distant Valley of Mexico.
The first two rulers of Dos Pilas continued to use the Mutal emblem glyph of Tikal, and they probably felt that they had a legitimate claim to the throne of Tikal itself.
[77] During this hiatus, satellite sites traditionally under Tikal's control began to erect their own monuments featuring local rulers and using the Mutal emblem glyph, with Tikal apparently lacking the authority or the power to crush these bids for independence.
The sites of Ixlu and Jimbal had by now inherited the once exclusive Mutal emblem glyph.
[39] The stela is also the earliest monument to bear the Tikal emblem glyph.