Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Mount Taishan' has mentioned 'Mountain' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
Mountain in Shandong
Mount Tai"Mount Tai" in Chinese charactersChinesexe6xb3xb0xe5xb1xb1Literal meaning"big mountain"TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinTxc3xa0i Shxc4x81nWadexe2x80x93GilesT'ai4 shan1IPA[txcaxb0axccx82ixc2xa0xcax82axccx81n]WuRomanizationTahxe5x85xa5 saexe5xb9xb3Yue: CantoneseYale RomanizationTaai sxc4x81anJyutpingTaai3 saan1Southern MinHokkien POJThxc3xa0i sanMiddle ChineseMiddle Chinesetxcaxb0aj xcax82eanOld ChineseBaxterxe2x80x93Sagart (2014)*lxccxa5xcbxa4a[t]-s s-xc5x8brarAlternative Chinese nameChinesexe5xb2xb1xe5xb1xb1xe3x80x81xe5xb2xb1xe5xb2xb3xe3x80x81xe5xb2xb1xe5xaex97xe3x80x81xe5xa4xaaxe5xb1xb1xe3x80x81xe4xb8x9cxe5xb2xb3TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinDxc3xa0i shxc4x81n
Mount Tai (Chinese: xe6xb3xb0xe5xb1xb1; pinyin: Txc3xa0i Shxc4x81n) is a mountain of historical and cultural significance located north of the city of Tai'an, it is the highest point in Shandong province, China.
Mount Tai is known as the eastern mountain of the Sacred Mountains of China.
The orogeny made the rock layers on the subsidence zone folded and uplifted into ancient land, forming a huge mountain system, which has experienced 2 billion years of weathering and denudation, and the terrain has gradually become flat.
The lower part of the mountain is a warm temperate zone and the top of the mountain is a medium temperate zone.
The mountain is cloudy and foggy, with an average annual precipitation of 1132mm, while the mountain is only 750mm.
During this time, two cultures had emerged near the mountain, the Dawenkou culture to the south and the Longshan culture to the north.
During the Xia Dynasty (c. 2070xe2x80x931600xc2xa0BC) the mountain was known as Mount Dai (Chinese: xe5xb2xb1xe5xb1xb1; pinyin: Dxc3xa0i Shxc4x81n) and lay within the borders of Qingzhou, one of the Nine Provinces of ancient China.
The sacrifices were an official imperial rite and Mount Tai became one of the principal places where the emperor would carry out the sacrifices to pay homage to heaven (on the summit) and earth (at the foot of the mountain) in the Feng (Chinese: xe5xb0x81; pinyin: Fxc4x93ng) and Shan (Chinese: xe7xa6xaa; pinyin: Shxc3xa0n) sacrifices respectively.
These would then be arranged in a ritually correct pattern before being buried on the mountain.
Confucian Buddhism, preaching, and experience, and cultural figures climbed the mountain, leaving behind a dazzling array of stone inscriptions, cliffs, and couplet stone carvings.
There are grandiose temples, many stone inscriptions and stone tablets with the mountain playing an important role in the development of both Buddhism and Taoism.
Mount Tai is a tilted fault-block mountain with height increasing from the north to the south.
Geologically, it is a tilted fault-block mountain, higher to the south than north, and is the oldest and most important example of the paleo-metamorphic system representative of the Cambrian Period in eastern China.
Hence, a great many cultural relics were left on the mountain.
The oldest surviving stair may be the 6,000 granite steps to the top of the mountain.
The Shrine of the Blue Dawn (Chinese: xe7xa2xa7xe9x9cx9exe7xa5xa0; pinyin: Bxc3xacxixc3xa1 Cxc3xad), near the top of the mountain is another grand building complex, a special combination of metal components, wood, and bricks and stone structures.
From the red gate at the foot of the mountain to the South Heaven Gate at the top are some 6,660 stone steps, which wind their way up the mountain slopes, each step offering a different view.
A flight of 7,200 total steps (including inner temple steps), with 6,293 Official Mountain Walkway Steps, lead up the East Peak of Mount Tai, along its course, there are 11 gates, 14 archways, 14 kiosks, and four pavilions.
The supplies for the many vendors along the road to the summit are carried up by porters either from the Midway Gate to Heaven or all the way up from the foot of the mountain.
To climb up the mountain, one can take one of two routes.
The climbing from the First Gate to Heaven (yi1 tian1 men2), the main entrance bordering on Tai'an town, up the entire mountain can take two and a half hours for the sprinting hiker to six hours for the leisure pace.
Mount Taishan is the most famous sacred mountain of China, with exceptional historic, cultural, aesthetic and scientific value.
Settled by humans as early as the Neolithic (a Dawenkou site is nearby), the mountain has been worshipped continuously throughout the last three millennia.
The mountain was an important object of the cult worship of mountains even before 219 BCE, when the Qin Emperor, Huang Di, paid tribute to the mountain in the Fengshan sacrifices to inform the gods of his success in unifying all of China.
On the mountain there are 12 historically recorded imperial ceremonies in homage to Heaven and Earth, about 1,800 stone tablets and inscriptions, and 22 temples, which together make Mount Taishan the most important monument in China, a world-renowned treasure house of history and culture.
The conceptual model of a mountain bearing the traces of man, where graceful structures xe2x80x93 bridges, gateways or pavilions xe2x80x93 contrast with sombre pine forests or frightening rocky cliffs, could only have originated by referring to Mount Taishan.
Criterion (iv): Mount Taishan is an outstanding example of a sacred mountain.
The Azure Cloud Temple, also constructed under the Song Dynasty, is typical of a mountain architectural complex in the arrangement of its courtyards and buildings,xc2xa0 and the Divine Rock Temple with its Thousand Buddhas Hall arexc2xa0 outstanding and complete examples of great temples.
This dramatic and majestic mountain is an outstanding combination of a beautiful natural landscape dominated by the cultural impacts of thousands of years of human use.
Much of the mountain has a grandeur and wilderness that belies its thousands of years of human use.