{"type": "FeatureCollection", "properties": {"layer": "", "name": "Sporopipes frontalis", "domain": []}, "features": [{"type": "Feature", "properties": {"lineage": {"pk": 3, "jsondata": {}, "id": "dogon", "name": "Dogon", "description": null, "markup_description": null, "glottocode": "dogo1299", "color": "c111111", "family": null, "family_glottocode": null}, "label": "ku\u0301:\u207f-[k\u0254\u0300w\u207f\u0254\u0300-s\u025b\u0301\u014b\u025b\u0300]", "icon": "https://tsammalex.clld.org/static/icons/c111111.png", "language": {"pk": 42, "lineage_pk": 3, "glottocode": "jams1239", "region": "Western Africa", "contribution_pk": 43, "jsondata": {"pdf_url": "https://cdstar.shh.mpg.de/bitstreams/EAEA0-FCE3-0D26-0E6D-0/jamsay.pdf"}, "id": "jamsay", "name": "Jamsay", "description": "Jamsay (from a common greeting) is the largest-population Dogon language. It is the dominant language of villages in the plains between and northeast of the major inselbergs in the northeastern area. Mainstream Jamsay extends from the Douentza area southeast to Bamba and Koro, and northeast to the Mondoro area (from where some villages extend into Burkina Faso). Mainstream Jamsay is quite uniform.", "markup_description": null, "latitude": 14.18, "longitude": -2.58}, "name": "Jamsay"}, "geometry": {"type": "Point", "coordinates": [-2.58, 14.18]}, "id": "jamsay"}, {"type": "Feature", "properties": {"lineage": {"pk": 3, "jsondata": {}, "id": "dogon", "name": "Dogon", "description": null, "markup_description": null, "glottocode": "dogo1299", "color": "c111111", "family": null, "family_glottocode": null}, "label": "sa\u0300y do\u0300no\u0301", "icon": "https://tsammalex.clld.org/static/icons/c111111.png", "language": {"pk": 145, "lineage_pk": 3, "glottocode": "toro1253", "region": "Western Africa", "contribution_pk": 146, "jsondata": {"pdf_url": "https://cdstar.shh.mpg.de/bitstreams/EAEA0-4261-A275-B6F4-0/torotegu.pdf"}, "id": "torotegu", "name": "Toro Tegu", "description": "Toro Tegu ('mountain language') is an Eastern Dogon language spoken in villages ringing (and formerly on the summits of) Tabi and Sarinyere mountains, southeast and southwest of the large town of Boni. Toro Tegu is unusual in not being strictly verb-final.", "markup_description": null, "latitude": 15.06, "longitude": -2.22}, "name": "Toro Tegu"}, "geometry": {"type": "Point", "coordinates": [-2.22, 15.06]}, "id": "torotegu"}]}