Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Monumental Earthworks of Poverty Point' has mentioned 'Archaeological' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
Poverty Point has been the focus of professional archaeological excavations since the 1950s.
Contents 1 Site description 1.1 Six C-shaped ridges 1.2 Plaza 1.3 Mound A 1.4 Mound B 1.5 Mound C 1.6 Mound D 1.7 Mound E 1.8 Mound F 1.9 Lower Jackson and Motley mounds 2 History 2.1 Construction 2.2 Purposes 2.3 Poverty Point people 2.3.1 Artifacts 3 Discovery, excavation and tourism 3.1 Discovery and archaeological excavation 3.2 Public access and site maintenance 3.3 UNESCO World Heritage Site designation 4 See also 5 References 6 External links
The earthworks core of the site measures about 345 acres (140 ha), although archaeological investigations have shown that the total occupation area extended for more than three miles (5xc2xa0km) along the Bayou Macon.
Archaeological excavations determined that prior to the construction of the earthworks, prehistoric workers leveled the land around the site and filled in gullies and other low places to create the flat central plaza and surfaces on which to build the mounds and ridges.
[33] Most archaeological excavations of the ridges at Poverty Point consist of small 3.3xc2xa0ft xc3x97xc2xa03.3xc2xa0ft (1xc2xa0m xc3x97xc2xa01xc2xa0m) units that cannot reveal the extent of an entire household.
Discovery and archaeological excavation[edit]
The Monumental Earthworks of Poverty Point is a publicly-owned and managed archaeological park in the parish of West Carroll, State of Louisiana, United States of America.
Collection and archaeological excavations have documented the rich material culture associated with this complex.
The archaeological deposits concealed below ground represent a repository of potential further information on the property and its builders.
Physical and intangible attributes of the nominated property as they have survived down the millennia, coupled with the extensive information obtained from the archaeological research conducted on the site and with the rich and largely undisturbed buried deposits, bear exceptional and credible witness to the Outstanding Universal Value of the Monumental Earthworks of Poverty Point and to the complex socio-cultural pattern of the societies that built the complex.