Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Tikal National Park' has mentioned 'Guatemala' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
Tikal (/tixcbx88kxc9x91xcbx90l/) (Tikxe2x80x99al in modern Mayan orthography) is the ruin of an ancient city, which was likely to have been called Yax Mutal,[2] found in a rainforest in Guatemala.
It is located in the archeological region of the Petxc3xa9n Basin in what is now northern Guatemala.
Situated in the department of El Petxc3xa9n, the site is part of Guatemala's Tikal National Park and in 1979 it was declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
[17] It was created on 26 May 1955 under the auspices of the Instituto de Antropologxc3xada e Historia and was the first protected area in Guatemala.
The ruins lie among the tropical rainforests of northern Guatemala that formed the cradle of lowland Maya civilization.
Maya civilization People Society Languages Writing Religion Mythology Sacrifice Cities Architecture Astronomy Calendar Stelae Art Textiles Trade Music Dance Medicine Cuisine Warfare History Preclassic Maya Classic Maya collapse Spanish conquest of the Maya Yucatxc3xa1n Chiapas Guatemala Petxc3xa9n vte
[28][30] At this time, Tikal participated in the widespread Chikanel culture that dominated the Central and Northern Maya areas at this time xe2x80x93 a region that included the entire Yucatan Peninsula including northern and eastern Guatemala and all of Belize.
Drawing of Tikal by mid-19th-century visitor Eusebio LaraArcheologist Edwin M. Shook, field director of the Tikal Project; Shook was also instrumental in having Tikal established as Guatemala's first National Park.
Tikal has been partially restored by the University of Pennsylvania and the government of Guatemala.
Thanks to the new findings, some archeologists believe that 7-11 million Maya people inhabited in the northern Guatemala during the late classical period from 650 to 800 A.D. Lidar digitally removed the tree canopy to reveal ancient remains and showed that Maya cities like Tikal were bigger than previously thought.
The project was mapped near the Maya Biosphere Reserve in the Petxc3xa9n region of Guatemala.
Tikal National Park is located in Northern Guatemala's Petxc3xa9n Province within a large forest region often referred to as the Maya Forest, which extends into neighbouring Mexico and Belize.
Tikal was declared a national monument in 1931 and a national park in 1955, one of Guatemala's first protected areas.
The strong population increase in this part of Guatemala in recent decades in a rural resource-dependent setting inevitably creates challenges.