Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text
The text related to the cultural heritage 'Kakadu National Park' has mentioned 'Escarpment' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence | Text Source |
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He followed Jim Jim Creek down from the Arnhem Land escarpment, then went down the South Alligator before crossing to the East Alligator and proceeding north. | WIKI |
There are six main landforms in Kakadu National Park: the Arnhem Land plateau and escarpment complex, known as the stone country; the outliers; the lowlands; the southern hills and basins; the floodplains; and the tidal flats. | WIKI |
Most of Kakadu was under a shallow sea approximately 140 million years ago, with the escarpment wall formed from sea cliffs and Arnhem Land from a flat plateau above the sea. | WIKI |
[20] The escarpment rises 330 metres above the plateau and extends approximately 500 kilometres along the East edge of the park and on into Arnhem Land. | WIKI |
[20] The escarpment varies from near vertical cliffs in the Jim Jim Falls area to isolated outliers and stepped cliffs in the North. | WIKI |
[20] Creeks have carved deep gorges in the escarpment in which tall monsoon forests grow. | WIKI |
Rocks here have been exposed from beneath the retreating Arnhem escarpment; they are of volcanic origin and are extremely old (2500 million years). | WIKI |
Burrunguy, formally called Nourlangie Rock, is located in an outlying formation of the Arnhem Land Escarpment. | WIKI |
Criterion (vii) : Kakadu National Park contains a remarkable contrast between the internationally recognised Ramsarxe2x80x93listed wetlands and the spectacular rocky escarpment and its outliers. | UNESCO |
The escarpment consists of vertical and stepped cliff faces up to 330 metres high and extends in a jagged and unbroken line for hundreds of kilometres. | UNESCO |
The plateau areas behind the escarpment are inaccessible by vehicle and contain large areas with no human infrastructure and limited public access. | UNESCO |
Kakaduxe2x80x99s ancient escarpment and stone country span more than two billion years of geological history, whereas the floodplains are recent, dynamic environments, shaped by changing sea levels and big floods every wet season. | UNESCO |