Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
Cryptocurrency historical datasets from January 2012 (if available) to October 2021 were obtained and integrated from various sources and Application Programming Interfaces (APIs) including Yahoo Finance, Cryptodownload, CoinMarketCap, various Kaggle datasets, and multiple APIs. While these datasets used various formats of time (e.g., minutes, hours, days), in order to integrate the datasets days format was used for in this research study. The integrated cryptocurrency historical datasets for 80 cryptocurrencies including but not limited to Bitcoin (BTC), Ethereum (ETH), Binance Coin (BNB), Cardano (ADA), Tether (USDT), Ripple (XRP), Solana (SOL), Polkadot (DOT), USD Coin (USDC), Dogecoin (DOGE), Tron (TRX), Bitcoin Cash (BCH), Litecoin (LTC), EOS (EOS), Cosmos (ATOM), Stellar (XLM), Wrapped Bitcoin (WBTC), Uniswap (UNI), Terra (LUNA), SHIBA INU (SHIB), and 60 more cryptocurrencies were uploaded in this online Mendeley data repository. Although the primary attribute of including the mentioned cryptocurrencies was the Market Capitalization, a subject matter expert i.e., a professional trader has also guided the initial selection of the cryptocurrencies by analyzing various indicators such as Relative Strength Index (RSI), Moving Average Convergence/Divergence (MACD), MYC Signals, Bollinger Bands, Fibonacci Retracement, Stochastic Oscillator and Ichimoku Cloud. The primary features of this dataset that were used as the decision-making criteria of the CLUS-MCDA II approach are Timestamps, Open, High, Low, Closed, Volume (Currency), % Change (7 days and 24 hours), Market Cap and Weighted Price values. The available excel and CSV files in this data set are just part of the integrated data and other databases, datasets and API References that was used in this study are as follows: [1] https://finance.yahoo.com/ [2] https://coinmarketcap.com/historical/ [3] https://cryptodatadownload.com/ [4] https://kaggle.com/philmohun/cryptocurrency-financial-data [5] https://kaggle.com/deepshah16/meme-cryptocurrency-historical-data [6] https://kaggle.com/sudalairajkumar/cryptocurrencypricehistory [7] https://min-api.cryptocompare.com/data/price?fsym=BTC&tsyms=USD [8] https://min-api.cryptocompare.com/ [9] https://p.nomics.com/cryptocurrency-bitcoin-api [10] https://www.coinapi.io/ [11] https://www.coingecko.com/en/api [12] https://cryptowat.ch/ [13] https://www.alphavantage.co/ This dataset is part of the CLUS-MCDA (Cluster analysis for improving Multiple Criteria Decision Analysis) and CLUS-MCDAII Project: https://aimaghsoodi.github.io/CLUSMCDA-R-Package/ https://github.com/Aimaghsoodi/CLUS-MCDA-II https://github.com/azadkavian/CLUS-MCDA
This data set is generated by the help of Binance Api.
What is Binance Api? The Binance API is a method that allows you to connect to the Binance servers via Python or several other programming languages. With it, you can automate your trading.
More specifically, Binance has a RESTful API that uses HTTP requests to send and receive data. Further, there is also a WebSocket available that enables the streaming of data such as price quotes and account updates.
In this data set the data is generated on the interval of 1 minute by an API. It includes many columns showing the real change in price of Bitcoin also shows the Open, High, Low, Close price of Bitcoin on particular minutes. The Open Time and Close Time in the data set are in Unix Timestamp.
Special thanks to Binance Stream Data Api.
CoinAPI delivers complete crypto market data with full price history and trading volumes. Access in-depth analytics and historical insights through simple export options via flat files and S3 API. Our extensive trading data integrates easily with your analytics tools for better market understanding.
https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
This dataset contains historical Bitcoin (BTC/USDT) price data from Binance exchange with the following specifications:
Timezone Information: - All timestamps are in UTC (Coordinated Universal Time) - Open time format: YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS.ffffff UTC - Close time format: YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS.ffffff UTC
Daily Timeframe Specific: - Open time: Always shows 00:00:00.000000 UTC (start of day) - Close time: Always shows 23:59:59.999000 UTC (end of day)
Timeframes Available: - 15-minute intervals (15m) - 1-hour intervals (1h) - 4-hour intervals (4h) - 1-day intervals (1d)
Data Columns: - Open time: Opening timestamp in UTC - Open: Opening price - High: Highest price during period - Low: Lowest price during period - Close: Closing price - Volume: Trading volume - Close time: Closing timestamp in UTC - Quote asset volume: Volume in quote asset (USDT) - Number of trades: Number of trades during period - Taker buy base asset volume: Volume of taker buy orders - Taker buy quote asset volume: Volume of taker buy orders in quote asset - Ignore: Unused field
Data is automatically updated and maintained through automated scripts.
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
Authors, through Twitter API, collected this database over eight months. These data are tweets of over 50 experts regarding market analysis of 40 cryptocurrencies. These experts are known as influencers on social networks such as Twitter. The theory of Behavioral economics shows that the opinions of people, especially experts, can impact the stock market trend (here, cryptocurrencies). Existing databases often cover tweets related to one or more cryptocurrencies. Also, in these databases, no attention is paid to the user's expertise, and most of the data is extracted using hashtags. Failure to pay attention to the user's expertise causes the irrelevant volume to increase and the neutral polarity to increase considerably. This database has a main table named "Tweets1" with 11 columns and 40 tables to separate comments related to each cryptocurrency. The columns of the main table and the cryptocurrency tables are explained in the attached document. Researchers can use this dataset in various machine learning tasks, such as sentiment analysis and deep transfer learning with sentiment analysis. Also, this data can be used to check the impact of influencers' opinions on the cryptocurrency market trend. The use of this database is allowed by mentioning the source. Also, in this version, we have added the excel version of the database and Python code to extract the names of influencers and tweets. in Version(3): In the new version, three datasets related to historical prices and sentiments related to Bitcoin, Ethereum, and Binance have been added as Excel files from January 1, 2023, to June 12, 2023. Also, two datasets of 52 influential tweets in cryptocurrencies have been published, along with the score and polarity of sentiments regarding more than 300 cryptocurrencies from February 2021 to June 2023. Also, two Python codes related to the sentiment analysis algorithm of tweets with Python have been published. This algorithm combines RoBERTa pre-trained deep neural network and BiGRU deep neural network with an attention layer (see code Preprocessing_and_sentiment_analysis with python).
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
The dataset was collected for the period spanning between 01/07/2019 and 31/12/2022.The historical Twitter volume were retrieved using ‘‘Bitcoin’’ (case insensitive) as the keyword from bitinfocharts.com. Google search volume was retrieved using library Gtrends. 2000 tweets per day using 4 times interval were crawled by employing Twitter API with the keyword “Bitcoin. The daily closing prices of Bitcoin, oil price, gold price, and U.S stock market indexes (S&P 500, NASDAQ, and Dow Jones Industrial Average) were collected using R libraries either Quantmod or Quandl.
CoinAPI's crypto OHLCV and trade data give you the complete picture of market activity across more than 350 exchanges worldwide. Our candlestick data covers everything from 1-second intervals for scalping to monthly timeframes for trend analysis, ensuring you have the right level of detail for your trading approach.
Each candlestick provides the essential price information traders rely on - open, high, low, and close prices - along with corresponding volume data that shows the market strength behind each move. This combination of price action and trading volume creates the foundation for effective technical analysis and trading decisions.
Getting this data is straightforward - use our WebSocket streams for real-time market monitoring when every second counts, or access historical candlesticks through our REST API when you're conducting deeper market research or backtesting strategies. We maintain comprehensive historical records, giving you the ability to analyze patterns across different market cycles.
Why work with us?
Market Coverage & Data Types: - Full Cryptocurrency Data - Real-time and historical data since 2010 (for chosen assets) - Full order book depth (L2/L3) - Tick-by-tick data - OHLCV across multiple timeframes - Market indexes (VWAP, PRIMKT) - Exchange rates with fiat pairs - Spot, futures, options, and perpetual contracts - Coverage of 90%+ global trading volume
Technical Excellence: - 99% uptime guarantee - Multiple delivery methods: REST, WebSocket, FIX, S3 - Standardized data format across exchanges - Ultra-low latency data streaming - Detailed documentation - Custom integration assistance
Whether you're building algorithmic trading systems, conducting research, or creating visualization tools, our real-time and historical candlesticks from exchanges worldwide provide the reliable market data you need
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Graph and download economic data for Coinbase Bitcoin (CBBTCUSD) from 2014-12-01 to 2025-08-09 about cryptocurrency and USA.
https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
This dataset contains historical price data for Bitcoin (BTC/USDT) from January 1, 2018, to the present. The data is sourced using the Binance API, providing granular candlestick data in four timeframes: - 15-minute (15M) - 1-hour (1H) - 4-hour (4H) - 1-day (1D)
This dataset includes the following fields for each timeframe: - Open time: The timestamp for when the interval began. - Open: The price of Bitcoin at the beginning of the interval. - High: The highest price during the interval. - Low: The lowest price during the interval. - Close: The price of Bitcoin at the end of the interval. - Volume: The trading volume during the interval. - Close time: The timestamp for when the interval closed. - Quote asset volume: The total quote asset volume traded during the interval. - Number of trades: The number of trades executed within the interval. - Taker buy base asset volume: The volume of the base asset bought by takers. - Taker buy quote asset volume: The volume of the quote asset spent by takers. - Ignore: A placeholder column from Binance API, not used in analysis.
Binance API: Used for retrieving 15-minute, 1-hour, 4-hour, and 1-day candlestick data from 2018 to the present.
This dataset is automatically updated every day using a custom Python program.
The source code for the update script is available on GitHub:
🔗 Bitcoin Dataset Kaggle Auto Updater
This dataset is provided under the CC0 Public Domain Dedication. It is free to use for any purpose, with no restrictions on usage or redistribution.
Despite their libertarian use cases to enable peer-to-peer, trustless, decentralised peer-to-peer transactions, behaviour consistent with speculative trading accounts for the majority of cryptoasset uses.
The FCA cryptoasset consumer research 2020 concluded that 47% of people considered buying cryptoassets as a gamble that could make or lose money, 25% sees it as part of their wider investment portfolio, 22% don't want to miss out on a money making opportunity, 17% classifies it as part of their long term savings plan (e.g. pension), and 7% invest in it because they don't trust the current financial system. Majority of people buy them on the expectation that the asset will appreciate in value over time simply because more people are buying it which subsequently creates risks for investors at all levels of the pyramid.
The RDA Price data stands in contrast with the market price to reveal the impact of speculative trading on each asset. The fundamental-market price ratio (FMr) is a key data point in this product. The FMr enables crypto users and investors to determine over-pricing and and manage risks upside and downside.
This dataset is an extra updating dataset for the G-Research Crypto Forecasting competition.
This is a daily updated dataset, automaticlly collecting market data for G-Research crypto forecasting competition. The data is of the 1-minute resolution, collected for all competition assets and both retrieval and uploading are fully automated. see discussion topic.
For every asset in the competition, the following fields from Binance's official API endpoint for historical candlestick data are collected, saved, and processed.
1. **timestamp** - A timestamp for the minute covered by the row.
2. **Asset_ID** - An ID code for the cryptoasset.
3. **Count** - The number of trades that took place this minute.
4. **Open** - The USD price at the beginning of the minute.
5. **High** - The highest USD price during the minute.
6. **Low** - The lowest USD price during the minute.
7. **Close** - The USD price at the end of the minute.
8. **Volume** - The number of cryptoasset u units traded during the minute.
9. **VWAP** - The volume-weighted average price for the minute.
10. **Target** - 15 minute residualized returns. See the 'Prediction and Evaluation section of this notebook for details of how the target is calculated.
11. **Weight** - Weight, defined by the competition hosts [here](https://www.kaggle.com/cstein06/tutorial-to-the-g-research-crypto-competition)
12. **Asset_Name** - Human readable Asset name.
The dataframe is indexed by timestamp
and sorted from oldest to newest.
The first row starts at the first timestamp available on the exchange, which is July 2017 for the longest-running pairs.
The following is a collection of simple starter notebooks for Kaggle's Crypto Comp showing PurgedTimeSeries in use with the collected dataset. Purged TimesSeries is explained here. There are many configuration variables below to allow you to experiment. Use either GPU or TPU. You can control which years are loaded, which neural networks are used, and whether to use feature engineering. You can experiment with different data preprocessing, model architecture, loss, optimizers, and learning rate schedules. The extra datasets contain the full history of the assets in the same format as the competition, so you can input that into your model too.
These notebooks follow the ideas presented in my "Initial Thoughts" here. Some code sections have been reused from Chris' great (great) notebook series on SIIM ISIC melanoma detection competition here
This is a work in progress and will be updated constantly throughout the competition. At the moment, there are some known issues that still needed to be addressed:
Opening price with an added indicator (MA50):
https://www.googleapis.com/download/storage/v1/b/kaggle-user-content/o/inbox%2F2234678%2Fb8664e6f26dc84e9a40d5a3d915c9640%2Fdownload.png?generation=1582053879538546&alt=media" alt="">
Volume and number of trades:
https://www.googleapis.com/download/storage/v1/b/kaggle-user-content/o/inbox%2F2234678%2Fcd04ed586b08c1576a7b67d163ad9889%2Fdownload-1.png?generation=1582053899082078&alt=media" alt="">
This data is being collected automatically from the crypto exchange Binance.
CoinAPI captures the full spectrum of crypto trading activity – from standard spot markets where assets change hands directly to complex derivatives instruments including futures, perpetuals, and options contracts that drive price discovery.
Our spot market coverage delivers exactly what professional traders expect: real-time trade feeds that capture every transaction, OHLCV candles for pattern recognition, up-to-the-moment quotes reflecting current market sentiment, and deep order book visibility showing true market liquidity. This complete picture helps institutions execute with confidence in fast-moving markets.
Why work with us?
Market Coverage & Data Types: - Real-time and historical data since 2010 (for chosen assets) - Full order book depth (L2/L3) - Tick-by-tick data - OHLCV across multiple timeframes - Market indexes (VWAP, PRIMKT) - Exchange rates with fiat pairs - Spot, futures, options, and perpetual contracts - Coverage of 90%+ global trading volume
Technical Excellence: - 99,9% uptime guarantee - Multiple delivery methods: REST, WebSocket, FIX, S3 - Standardized data format across exchanges - Ultra-low latency data streaming - Detailed documentation - Custom integration assistance
CoinAPI serves hundreds of institutions worldwide, from trading firms and hedge funds to research organizations and technology providers. We deliver reliable, accurate data that helps our clients make informed decisions in the fast-moving cryptocurrency markets. Our team of experts works tirelessly to ensure you have the market intelligence you need, when you need it – because in this industry, timing is everything.
MIT Licensehttps://opensource.org/licenses/MIT
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Crypto Coin Historical Data (2018-2025)
A dataset containing cryptocurrency historical price data across multiple timeframes. Designed to provide a standardized, easily accessible dataset for cryptocurrency research and algorithmic trading development. This dataset is automatically updated daily using the Binance API, ensuring that it remains current and relevant for users. Last updated on 2025-05-11 00:17:48.
Usage
from datasets import load_dataset dataset =… See the full description on the dataset page: https://huggingface.co/datasets/linxy/CryptoCoin.
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
Represents the bitcoin rates for the last few days in different currencies. Have been fetched from bitcoinaverage.com API within a Taverna Workbench Workflow
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
Analysis of ‘Crypto Fear and Greed Index’ provided by Analyst-2 (analyst-2.ai), based on source dataset retrieved from https://www.kaggle.com/adelsondias/crypto-fear-and-greed-index on 13 February 2022.
--- Dataset description provided by original source is as follows ---
Each day, the website https://alternative.me/crypto/fear-and-greed-index/ publishes this index based on analysis of emotions and sentiments from different sources crunched into one simple number: The Fear & Greed Index for Bitcoin and other large cryptocurrencies.
The crypto market behaviour is very emotional. People tend to get greedy when the market is rising which results in FOMO (Fear of missing out). Also, people often sell their coins in irrational reaction of seeing red numbers. With our Fear and Greed Index, we try to save you from your own emotional overreactions. There are two simple assumptions:
Therefore, we analyze the current sentiment of the Bitcoin market and crunch the numbers into a simple meter from 0 to 100. Zero means "Extreme Fear", while 100 means "Extreme Greed". See below for further information on our data sources.
We are gathering data from the five following sources. Each data point is valued the same as the day before in order to visualize a meaningful progress in sentiment change of the crypto market.
First of all, the current index is for bitcoin only (we offer separate indices for large alt coins soon), because a big part of it is the volatility of the coin price.
But let’s list all the different factors we’re including in the current index:
We’re measuring the current volatility and max. drawdowns of bitcoin and compare it with the corresponding average values of the last 30 days and 90 days. We argue that an unusual rise in volatility is a sign of a fearful market.
Also, we’re measuring the current volume and market momentum (again in comparison with the last 30/90 day average values) and put those two values together. Generally, when we see high buying volumes in a positive market on a daily basis, we conclude that the market acts overly greedy / too bullish.
While our reddit sentiment analysis is still not in the live index (we’re still experimenting some market-related key words in the text processing algorithm), our twitter analysis is running. There, we gather and count posts on various hashtags for each coin (publicly, we show only those for Bitcoin) and check how fast and how many interactions they receive in certain time frames). A unusual high interaction rate results in a grown public interest in the coin and in our eyes, corresponds to a greedy market behaviour.
Together with strawpoll.com (disclaimer: we own this site, too), quite a large public polling platform, we’re conducting weekly crypto polls and ask people how they see the market. Usually, we’re seeing 2,000 - 3,000 votes on each poll, so we do get a picture of the sentiment of a group of crypto investors. We don’t give those results too much attention, but it was quite useful in the beginning of our studies. You can see some recent results here.
The dominance of a coin resembles the market cap share of the whole crypto market. Especially for Bitcoin, we think that a rise in Bitcoin dominance is caused by a fear of (and thus a reduction of) too speculative alt-coin investments, since Bitcoin is becoming more and more the safe haven of crypto. On the other side, when Bitcoin dominance shrinks, people are getting more greedy by investing in more risky alt-coins, dreaming of their chance in next big bull run. Anyhow, analyzing the dominance for a coin other than Bitcoin, you could argue the other way round, since more interest in an alt-coin may conclude a bullish/greedy behaviour for that specific coin.
We pull Google Trends data for various Bitcoin related search queries and crunch those numbers, especially the change of search volumes as well as recommended other currently popular searches. For example, if you check Google Trends for "Bitcoin", you can’t get much information from the search volume. But currently, you can see that there is currently a +1,550% rise of the query „bitcoin price manipulation“ in the box of related search queries (as of 05/29/2018). This is clearly a sign of fear in the market, and we use that for our index.
There's a story behind every dataset and here's your opportunity to share yours.
This dataset is produced and maintained by the administrators of https://alternative.me/crypto/fear-and-greed-index/.
This published version is an unofficial copy of their data, which can be also collected using their API (e.g., GET https://api.alternative.me/fng/?limit=10&format=csv&date_format=us).
--- Original source retains full ownership of the source dataset ---
https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
The dataset is an extract of the Binance trading platform using the public REST API. It contains data covering the btcusdt historical market data for the year 2022, using the monthly chart frame. It's ideal for analysts who want a quick peek at historical crypto trading data for data exploration.
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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Analysis of ‘Doge Coin: An explosion’ provided by Analyst-2 (analyst-2.ai), based on source dataset retrieved from https://www.kaggle.com/cyruskouhyar/doge-coin-an-explosion on 13 February 2022.
--- Dataset description provided by original source is as follows ---
this Dataset contains the doge coin prices in 2019-Now
Doge Coin prices with details, open, close, low and high prices. open and close and all related dates. API that I got the results of is CoinAPI: with free plan you can access rest api i put the link below so you can also use it.
thanks to CoinAPI for this amazing service. I will be happy if you vote up it and follow my kaggle profile.😃 I did the same thing for bitcoin: https://www.kaggle.com/cyruskouhyar/btcprices2015now
--- Original source retains full ownership of the source dataset ---
Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 (CC BY-SA 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/
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Cryptocurrencies have become more than just a computational challenge with the recent Bitcoin Future listing on NASDAQ, hence it becomes an interesting spot for analysts to get their hands dirty. This data even though is minimal, help analysts get started in the world of cryptocurrenices analysis.
Column Information:
This data is an extract from the R-package coinmarketcapr which is an R binding of the coinmarketcap api. Courtesy: coinmarketcap.com
The AXOVISION AI Signals Crypto Sentiment Scores offer substantial advantages to optimise your crypto investment strategy and can be directly converted into alpha - without any further calculations.
Daily sentiment score sent at 17:30 p.m. CET. Based on price, volume, funding rates & news and social media data. Well suited for high return opportunities with reduced volatility.
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
The dataset contains open, close, low, high prices and volume of Bitcoin. I use API of Coinbase to gather this data.
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
Cryptocurrency historical datasets from January 2012 (if available) to October 2021 were obtained and integrated from various sources and Application Programming Interfaces (APIs) including Yahoo Finance, Cryptodownload, CoinMarketCap, various Kaggle datasets, and multiple APIs. While these datasets used various formats of time (e.g., minutes, hours, days), in order to integrate the datasets days format was used for in this research study. The integrated cryptocurrency historical datasets for 80 cryptocurrencies including but not limited to Bitcoin (BTC), Ethereum (ETH), Binance Coin (BNB), Cardano (ADA), Tether (USDT), Ripple (XRP), Solana (SOL), Polkadot (DOT), USD Coin (USDC), Dogecoin (DOGE), Tron (TRX), Bitcoin Cash (BCH), Litecoin (LTC), EOS (EOS), Cosmos (ATOM), Stellar (XLM), Wrapped Bitcoin (WBTC), Uniswap (UNI), Terra (LUNA), SHIBA INU (SHIB), and 60 more cryptocurrencies were uploaded in this online Mendeley data repository. Although the primary attribute of including the mentioned cryptocurrencies was the Market Capitalization, a subject matter expert i.e., a professional trader has also guided the initial selection of the cryptocurrencies by analyzing various indicators such as Relative Strength Index (RSI), Moving Average Convergence/Divergence (MACD), MYC Signals, Bollinger Bands, Fibonacci Retracement, Stochastic Oscillator and Ichimoku Cloud. The primary features of this dataset that were used as the decision-making criteria of the CLUS-MCDA II approach are Timestamps, Open, High, Low, Closed, Volume (Currency), % Change (7 days and 24 hours), Market Cap and Weighted Price values. The available excel and CSV files in this data set are just part of the integrated data and other databases, datasets and API References that was used in this study are as follows: [1] https://finance.yahoo.com/ [2] https://coinmarketcap.com/historical/ [3] https://cryptodatadownload.com/ [4] https://kaggle.com/philmohun/cryptocurrency-financial-data [5] https://kaggle.com/deepshah16/meme-cryptocurrency-historical-data [6] https://kaggle.com/sudalairajkumar/cryptocurrencypricehistory [7] https://min-api.cryptocompare.com/data/price?fsym=BTC&tsyms=USD [8] https://min-api.cryptocompare.com/ [9] https://p.nomics.com/cryptocurrency-bitcoin-api [10] https://www.coinapi.io/ [11] https://www.coingecko.com/en/api [12] https://cryptowat.ch/ [13] https://www.alphavantage.co/ This dataset is part of the CLUS-MCDA (Cluster analysis for improving Multiple Criteria Decision Analysis) and CLUS-MCDAII Project: https://aimaghsoodi.github.io/CLUSMCDA-R-Package/ https://github.com/Aimaghsoodi/CLUS-MCDA-II https://github.com/azadkavian/CLUS-MCDA