The advantage of the Reich AADR anno file is that it can be opened in Excel where you can filter by all the attributes there are: dates, coverage, geographical coordinates, contamination, even sex and haplogroup if you're looking for an ancestor, or publishing year for nostalgia.
I added the G25 coordinates from the latest ancients files to the end of the lines where the corresponding ID was found.
Did it with a Python script that had problems with the encoding so may not be 100%. It could probably be done simply in Excel too, importing the G25 datasheets, and textsplit and vlookup the IDs.
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/e...output=tsv
I added the G25 coordinates from the latest ancients files to the end of the lines where the corresponding ID was found.
Did it with a Python script that had problems with the encoding so may not be 100%. It could probably be done simply in Excel too, importing the G25 datasheets, and textsplit and vlookup the IDs.
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/e...output=tsv