@jasonaholliday The other somewhat better option is to identify the centromere repeat (if not known can do e.g. https://t.co/6KC35NRqEx) and blast or whatever to figure out where that is. That will be bigger than "true" centromere but gets you pretty close
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@ChenxinLi2 I don’t know if there is one one but this paper might be helpful: https://t.co/ISKLPWKprE
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@cancermercury @ScienceNews Hi there! This may be what you're looking for https://t.co/SIj07r9QSb https://t.co/sGHo343eKf https://t.co/BompILfBmf https://t.co/4qCYmDPpB9
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@cancermercury @ScienceNews Hi there! This may be what you're looking for https://t.co/SIj07r9QSb https://t.co/sGHo343eKf https://t.co/BompILfBmf