The Irish DNA Atlas - Revealing Irish History through Genetics

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  • Опубліковано 13 бер 2020
  • Dr Edmund Gilbert will be presenting an update to the Irish DNA Atlas study, a joint research project between the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland and the Genealogical Society of Ireland. He will be presenting the current status of the project, and how geneticists have used the Irish DNA Atlas as a resource to investigate the genetic ancestry of Ireland.

КОМЕНТАРІ • 233

  • @exoplanet11
    @exoplanet11 3 роки тому +8

    Thanks for the work done in recording this video and then superimposing the images from the original slide show, which were much clearer to see than the video of the presentation.

  • @patriciayohn6136
    @patriciayohn6136 3 роки тому +12

    Thank you, you pretty much nailed what I know about my Paternal side. My maiden name is Bell, my Great Great Grandfather, John Bell was born in Clones, County Monaghan in 1841 or 42. When I was young my Great Aunt told me several pieces of information about her Grandfather, he moved to Paisley Scotland around age 12 because he still had family there. He was baptized Church of Ireland. He was a tailor by trade. He joined the Loyal Lilly Orange Lodge around 15 years of age and emigrated from Scotland to Philadelphia in 1859. His parents were James and Sallie Bell.

    • @SB-sj4uz
      @SB-sj4uz 3 роки тому +4

      I am a Bell from Yorkshire England but my father's side came to work the mines from Carlisle and the English/Scottish boarders at the turn the of the century. The Bell's originally came from Dumfries and Galloway south west Scotland.
      Signum Pacis Amor

    • @andreav318
      @andreav318 3 роки тому +2

      My mother’s maiden name is Bell 🔔❤️

    • @SB-sj4uz
      @SB-sj4uz 3 роки тому +1

      @Searlait Loughlin more than likely yes.

    • @brenharris6214
      @brenharris6214 2 роки тому +1

      We have Bells from Virginia in our family, glad you have your history documented

  • @eschuler6503
    @eschuler6503 2 роки тому +2

    The 'Ireland' which shows in my DNA testing has been the most mysterious to me as I have no known ancestors out of Ireland. Many French / French Canadian however and I have just discovered that the 'Ireland' is from my father's side, whose mother was a Le Brun (Breton) changed to Brown when reached America. Specifically at the 23 and Me site, county Donegal shows as most prominent. I always speculated the Ireland showing in my tests was from my more Flemish/Nordic mother's side as I know there have been such settlements in Ireland and Scotland.

  • @zmazzyhtx
    @zmazzyhtx 3 роки тому +14

    I found this due to the fact that I’ve physically changed dramatically in my mid 20s. My mother’s side is pure Irish and grew up looking like my fathers French side. Now my hair is turning red and white, my eyes are green and gold instead of blue, and my face is more chiseled. It’s a wild change that I didn’t expect considering I’m way past puberty. I’ve always been a student of biology and this is really cool. Thank you!!

    • @tonipepperoni3424
      @tonipepperoni3424 3 роки тому

      Whoa that's such a crazy biological change to have at an older age, I also have french at 10% and irish at 10% according to my dna test

    • @szkyy5171
      @szkyy5171 3 роки тому +2

      I was a blue eyed, blonde hair baby and child, then after puberty my hair turned auburn, beard grew in a dark red, my eyes gain pigmentation and turned hazel with green on the outside and brown on the inside, and the chiseled face in women is definitely an Irish trait I noticed! My mom has very sharp features.

    • @sasachiminesh1204
      @sasachiminesh1204 2 роки тому +7

      There's no such thing as "pure" Irish or anything else. What would "pure " Irish be??? Irish people are the result of at least 6 major waves of different IndoEuropean stock, while the original inhabitants are more properly Middle Eastern and Mediterranean, since that's where they migrated from.

    • @eamonnclabby7067
      @eamonnclabby7067 2 роки тому +1

      I have been mistaken as an a Iraqi ,Iranian and and once in Harvard as a visiting Rabbi, here on Merseyside I was told I look like a resident of the Golan heights by a Jordanian firefighter, being originally from Ulster / Northern Ireland, who knows...Princess Scotia and her bronze age retainers have a lot to answer for...best wishes from the wirral...E

    • @Martin-sp4zf
      @Martin-sp4zf Рік тому +1

      This happens almost immediately on the commencement of drinking Guinness. Check your recent drinking behaviour and any changes thereof.

  • @reason5591
    @reason5591 2 роки тому +1

    I'm a Callahan aka Callaghan, O'Callaghan,O'Callahan, O'Ceallachain. County Cork. Ancestor King of Munster. Castle Dromineen Mallow, County Cork. The ruins are still there an partially standing.
    Fortunately due to the ancestors royalty, our genetic research has long been done for us. What I've found is that DNA results match perfectly with what genealogical society in Cork found in their research, which proves an Eyptian female the daughter of a Pharaoh was the earliest ancestor that could be exactly pinpointed in the societies findings.

  • @icyy-_-warrior1650
    @icyy-_-warrior1650 Рік тому

    Thank you so much !!

  • @stephenarbon2227
    @stephenarbon2227 4 роки тому +2

    In looking at the combined map,
    there was mentioned that there were samples from Glasgow,
    but with apparent ancestry to Donegal.
    Are the markers shown in Donegal or Glasgow?
    If I remember the British atDNA study of a few years ago,
    the samples were not used if they came from a different area.

    • @bethbartlett5692
      @bethbartlett5692 2 роки тому

      It depends on exactly what they are looking for. If Ancient DNA then they focus on the Larger % of Irish = Basque (Basque are largely what post flood DNA Irish came from.)
      That is most exciting. Known for Rh(-) blood type and their own unique language (that's huge, no other language really shares the Basque Language type)
      There a vast greater history than they are willing to admit just yet but it will emerge as the DNA is scientifically clarifying facts, (rather than the Archaeologists Paradigm based on their Darwinian, Dogma like, idea of Timeline).
      This presentation is not really as clarified as it could be. Presenting materials in a highly Academic manner, does not indicate its more accurate.
      It actually demonstrates their inability to offer information with greater clarity for educating the general public.
      I have my degree with 3 majors and various post grad research > 7 years, and I find this content presented unnecessarily technical and highly dry.
      Having content knowledge does not factor 8nto having presentation or teaching skills.
      I refer to the style as "like reading a label on a bottle of meds"
      But I don't desire to be judgemental. Just the review would point out Speaker's need for training and Adviser with Public Speaking/Teaching skill training.

  • @sbarr10
    @sbarr10 4 роки тому +3

    I wish I understood the graphics in the 2019 paper. For example, in figure 4, the shapes and colors in the key (red and blue, with lines through some circles) seems to have no relationship to the solid colored circles on the map.

  • @fintonmainz7845
    @fintonmainz7845 Місяць тому

    It would be interesting to examine the dna of irish speakers in Donegal to see if would reveal information about "pre plantation Ulster"

  • @kateeilers574
    @kateeilers574 3 роки тому +21

    I am 60% Irish, an American. I am getting cousin-matches in Ireland who are reported as 100% Irish, I was astounded, I didn't know anyone was 100% anything!

    • @wodenravens
      @wodenravens 3 роки тому +15

      Even in Ireland they are very unlikely to be *literally* 100% Irish. What that means is that their ancestry is 100% *typical* for Ireland in the 2000s (according to their data set). But if you did a detailed analysis you would find various influences from Viking, Norman, Anglo-Irish, English, Welsh and Scottish (and surely elsewhere). As the presenter said, people in the east of Ireland have far more British ancestry when they do a deep analysis, but on a typical online ancestry test these will probably show as 100% Irish as the test is not of the same depth.

    • @kateeilers574
      @kateeilers574 3 роки тому +11

      @@wodenravens Thank you for your input. If anyone in Ireland has the slightest chance of coming close to being 100% Irish, its us. To your point, we are from Village Keel, Achill Island as you know, The West.
      My g-grandfather might have been 4'9" tall, his photo looks like a leprechaun hoisted up onto a foyer table for his photo being taken. Historically, we weren't worth invading. Rock houses with thatched roofs, barefooted women, poverty beyond anything I've ever seen.
      I do appreciate your input.

    • @wodenravens
      @wodenravens 3 роки тому +13

      ​@@kateeilers574 I'm sure, but online ancestry tests don't tell you that detail. They just say that you're typical for an area. It doesn't tell you how much of that 'typical' is something else. Even in remote parts of Ireland there'll be Viking, Norman, English and Scottish DNA.
      Edit: By the way, you mentioned 'invasions'. While I agree that somewhere like Achill Island might not have many non-Irish people directly 'invade' (or settle) there, that is not how people in remote areas usually get 'foreign' DNA. It happens over generations as they marry people locally. Every now and then someone marries outside the island/hamlet. 'Townie' DNA washes into remote areas which, over the centuries, brings English, Norman, etc. DNA into remote islands.
      I also have relatives from that area of Ireland so I was interested to read a bit more. As always, we probably underestimate how mobile people were in the past. Not only was Achill Island one of the hubs of the Gaelic Revival (it housed a summer school attended even by English people in 1912-13), between the 18th-20th centuries the young people also went on annual trips to Britain as part of the 'Harvest Migration'. This created opportunities to 'meet' people from outside the island.
      Edit 2: Sorry for rambling on, but this shows how much movement there was even in remote areas in the past. Ulster has the most British DNA in Ireland and in the 17th and 18th centuries there was heavy migration into Achill from Ulster, leading to two dialects of Irish being spoken there. Even today Achill Irish has many Ulster influences. These people would have brought Ulster DNA into Achill, which includes a lot more Scottish and English DNA than typical for the area. Fascinating stuff.

    • @anglishbookcraft1516
      @anglishbookcraft1516 3 роки тому +5

      Saying 100% is not possible is a lie told to hurt white seldom. As far as being 100% Irish, it means their DNA is 100% found within the borders of Ireland. Mine is all English besides about 14% that is Norwish and Swedish, meaning only 14% of the DNA comes from outside of England, clearly it’s from the Vikings.

    • @wodenravens
      @wodenravens 3 роки тому +5

      @@anglishbookcraft1516 That's not what DNA tests say. They say nothing about where your DNA is from; the test tells you where your DNA is most characteristic of. You could have no Swedish ancestors but still have DNA characteristic of Swedish people, for example.
      Edit: It's also dependent on the specific company's pool of DNA from which it draws regional profiles. These are often limited and inaccurate.

  • @jsmcguireIII
    @jsmcguireIII 8 місяців тому

    Thank you Dr. Gibert for your good work and presentation. I wonder if the patchiness of the Scottish data was also a result of the Highland Clearances in the 18th and 19th centuries. The Icelandic study paints a picture for me of those roving Norsemen grabbing some bonnie Donegal and Dal Riata lasses on their way to the land of Fire and Ice.

  • @TheBeardedDoog
    @TheBeardedDoog 2 роки тому +2

    Cool study bro

  • @DomhnallOSuileabhainPrin-tm1fw
    @DomhnallOSuileabhainPrin-tm1fw 4 роки тому +4

    I'm one of the volunteers

  • @bethbartlett5692
    @bethbartlett5692 3 роки тому +7

    Kerry lineage. G Grandparents. The Lynch side came to USA in mid-late 1700's, GGrandfather X 6 Lynch founded Lynchburg, VA.
    I believe that side was County Cork.
    I must go to Co Kerry, have decided to take an extended visit there and use the time to write. When I complete the current book, just beginning, then the next may be influenced by my feeling of the Ireland magnetic energies. .
    County Kerry and Rh(-)
    The names won't be of much help: Murphy and Sullivan
    Rather common however, I might enjoy a really Large Family gathering. That would actually be most desirable, since mine is - ah, not really close.

    • @jimlynch5135
      @jimlynch5135 3 роки тому +2

      My Lynch side came from County Cork as well. I think they moved up to County Kildare in the late 1700’s to early 1800’s. Maybe we’re from same Lynch family!

    • @eamonnclabby7067
      @eamonnclabby7067 2 роки тому

      I believe that Lynch was one of the tribes of Galway, and a certain Judge Lynch condemned his own son to death, hence the term..Irelands Own magazine ,based in Wexford do good bite size family names and history..best wishes from the wirral...E

    • @bethbartlett5692
      @bethbartlett5692 2 роки тому

      @@jimlynch5135
      I believe we very well are. As DNA gets more and more studies they clearly map so many related over years and those are even from the same family names.
      The challenge are my other 2 prominent names: Murphy and Sullivan, no less. lol
      Murphy is County Kerry and and Sullivan both Kerry and Cork.
      I think Mom had traced a Lynch connection to Mayo also. There's a Lynch Castle and I want to say it is just north of County Kerry, an easy Search item.
      My Lynch family founded Lynchburg, VA and few years prior to 1776.
      I've found relative all around the area. I was born in Chicago but now am in West Tennessee. My dad's family here.
      The Irish DNA is revealing some really interesting Ancient History. We are Basque and that is truly interesting. Our Basque lineage has a History that says "We are from Atlantica".
      I must note, after cash Research in Ancient History (History one if my college degree focus subjects and 7 years of post-grad research, at varying amounts, *has revealed to me that Oral Histories are far more accurate than written and that accused to be Myth, is largely misinterpreted by Archaeologists and hasn't been given due time.
      The Modern Mainstream Archaeologists are truly the far more serious Myth Makers and they made a fictionalized Paradigm based on their 19th Century Theory being used as the foundation of fact for their Timeline and Paradigm.
      Again DNA is the greater science rescuing this subject. It really need an overhaul and an editing for Facts based on the Standards of Science and Research.
      They're behaving like it's their Darwinian Dogma (like Religion rather than facts)
      Concerning and nothing against ones Religion, they just benefit from a separation of History vs Religion. They will eventually join up as we gain greater fact and iron out the Edits.
      Best Regards! 😘
      🍀💚🍀

    • @bethbartlett5692
      @bethbartlett5692 2 роки тому

      @@eamonnclabby7067
      I've heard the story about that situation bit didn't know it was a Lynch.
      I understand that the word Lynching was derived from a Judge that was busy. Haven't validated this though.

    • @eamonnclabby7067
      @eamonnclabby7067 2 роки тому

      @@bethbartlett5692 the Basque connection to Ireland is an ancient and long lasting one as is the case here on Merseyside, there is a fair few Lynch folk here too ,I actually worked alongside a young Ms Lynch at Clatterbridge hospital here on the wirral in the 80,s,keep well and safe over there....

  • @gympump9766
    @gympump9766 3 роки тому +17

    So glad this reaserch is being done.
    I'm not sure that we will ever be able to isolate native, pre celtic invasion (step people's) DNA as they wiped out an estimated 90% of the inhabitants but identifying two unique mutation's in ireland and three in Scotland gives me real hope that we may no longer be stabbing in the dark and may soon be able to get some real answers.
    No people's have suffered like the brittons and soon we shall unite. 🙏
    At least six invasions and still standing.

    • @carolgebert7833
      @carolgebert7833 2 роки тому

      I thought bell beaker DNA was the majority of the DNA? And that the Celtic DNA was the thread that was hard to find?

    • @carolgebert7833
      @carolgebert7833 Рік тому

      @@MiloManning05 yes, the Basques are descendants of the Bell Beaker people, too. They brought copper to Europe.

    • @karlbyrne6021
      @karlbyrne6021 Рік тому

      I agree. I was in bilbao a while ago and they even looked like us. Greetings from Dublin Ireland

  • @teresasardinas5642
    @teresasardinas5642 5 місяців тому +1

    My father’s Y Haplogroup is R-FGC5628. Where is it now in Ireland?

  • @ronzombie6541
    @ronzombie6541 2 роки тому +1

    Where's the Y haplogroup breakdown?

  • @wodenravens
    @wodenravens 3 роки тому +4

    Very interesting that the Irish and Welsh are relatively distant compared to relations between Irish and Scotland and England. Is this distance reflected in ancient DNA too or is this a result of recent centuries of migration? I am wondering about what implications this has for a shared "Celtic" heritage. If a similar distance is repeated in ancient DNA then it would be interesting.

    • @karenbartlett1307
      @karenbartlett1307 3 роки тому +1

      I think people from Wales are Brittons (like the Picts), while the people of Ireland are often Celts, except there is also a lot of Viking DNA (Norwegian I believe he said) in Ireland, especially in parts NW, such as Donegal, where my Irish ancestors are mostly from.

    • @wodenravens
      @wodenravens 3 роки тому +4

      ​@@karenbartlett1307 I'm not sure we can make that distinction. Keltoí and Celtae were used by Greeks and Romans to refer to people in mainland Europe (upper Rhine and Danube). The Romans used Celtae to refer to continental Gauls, but not to 'Celts' in Britain or Ireland. It is only from the 17th century anyone started calling Welsh, Cornish, Irish, Scottish, etc. 'Celtic'. So it is hard to say who are the 'real' Celts IMO.

    • @karenbartlett1307
      @karenbartlett1307 3 роки тому

      @@wodenravens Maybe I should have said Gaels.

    • @wodenravens
      @wodenravens 3 роки тому +2

      @@karenbartlett1307 Yes, I don't think anyone would say the Welsh are Gaels. But there is a strong belief in shared 'Celtic' heritage among the Celtic-speaking nations. Of course there is shared heritage there, but it seems far short of the shared ethnicity that many people thought was true even a decade or so ago. A lot of people still talk about having 'Celtic blood' as if it is so.

    • @karenbartlett1307
      @karenbartlett1307 3 роки тому +2

      @@wodenravens Perhaps. I'm not an expert. But I think the Welsh are Britons, or maybe the word is Breton. They spoke a Brithonic language, not a Gaelic language. Old Brit as differentiated from either Gaelic or English.

  • @1tarawho
    @1tarawho Рік тому

    My ancestors on my mom's side came to America in the late 1700s. The last name was Kain. It was changed when in America by some ancestors to Cain or Caine or Kane. But the original spelling was Kain. We came from northern Ireland!!!

  • @knittingbandit8493
    @knittingbandit8493 3 роки тому +1

    My dad whose 92 came from co. Monaghan and was found to be 4% Finnish. Can anyone explain please?

  • @thunorwodenson
    @thunorwodenson 2 роки тому

    Have you compared native Irish speakers to English speaking Irishmen? They appear to me to be darker skinned brown eyed and darker haired than other Irish people. Same is true or appears to be among Gaelic speakers in Scotland. I would guess that Irish speakers would be closely related to Gaelic speakers in Scotland; maybe even closer than with English speaking Irishmen.

  • @nicholahenry539
    @nicholahenry539 3 дні тому

    I had my DNA done and found that I have the highest part are Irish Scottish Welsh then English and then Scandinavian

  • @edcarson3113
    @edcarson3113 3 роки тому +4

    Wow all the way back to 150 years ago

    • @MrKurdkiller
      @MrKurdkiller 3 роки тому +1

      If you go back over 2000 years ago or further back you will find that you are originally from the Middle East modern-day Iraq but not Arab ancient Assyrian

    • @andreav318
      @andreav318 3 роки тому

      @@MrKurdkiller for real 👍

    • @injunsun
      @injunsun 3 роки тому

      @@MrKurdkiller My mitochondria line, HV0, came to me by way of Southwest England, but originated in what's now modern Iraq or Iran, travelling across northern Europe during the Bell-Beaker and Corded Ware expansions, getting pushed west into Britain by the Celts.

  • @therealmcgoy4968
    @therealmcgoy4968 3 роки тому +7

    I would think that Scotland would have a much higher amount of Norse ancestry

    • @eleveneleven572
      @eleveneleven572 3 роки тому +2

      Its a mixture....Picts, Anglo Saxon, Brythonic, Norse, Irish.

    • @gringoanon4550
      @gringoanon4550 3 роки тому +3

      The Norse didn't like attacking Scotland, they usually came off worse.

    • @eleveneleven572
      @eleveneleven572 3 роки тому +1

      @@gringoanon4550
      They actually took over swathes of Scotland.
      www.thegreatcoursesdaily.com/the-viking-presence-and-influence-in-scotland/

    • @eleveneleven572
      @eleveneleven572 3 роки тому

      @Searlait Loughlin
      Native Bryrhonic people were also south western Scotland.
      en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kingdom_of_Strathclyde

    • @eleveneleven572
      @eleveneleven572 3 роки тому +1

      @Searlait Loughlin Brythonic people weren't Pictish. And if only 0.3% of DNA is Pictish then a genocide must have been committed by the Irish.

  • @johnnycroat
    @johnnycroat 3 роки тому +2

    Here’s a head scratcher. I am Croatian recent ftdna update shows 5% Irish for me and 9% for my dad and some Finnish.

    • @Dylaz97
      @Dylaz97 3 роки тому +3

      Keep in mind that movement of European populations has been quite fluid over the past 1000 years, the Irish and Northern Scots often interbred with Scandinavian populations due to close proximity and constant interaction often being taken as slaves or mistresses and such, the Scandinavians ventured all over the the European and North American coasts.
      This however doesn't mean that the test is completely accurate, it could well be that some tests struggle to pinpoint where your ancestors came from. You could well have some really ancient ancestors that share similar ancestors with modern populations of Scandinavians or Irish that can't quite be determined, that can cause much confusion.
      On top of this it's also possible that you only inherited certain sections of DNA, therefore making it appear more prominent than it was in your parents, for example I show up as over 35% Scandinavian yet have no Scandinavian ancestors for the past 1000 years, I just through chance inherited that much of my genome from that population, I am most genetically similar to Icelanders than anyone else, yet I have no Icelandic ancestors, we simply share many of the same ancestors and thus look genetically similar.

    • @sgjoni
      @sgjoni 3 роки тому +2

      @@Dylaz97 Hi from Iceland ;-)

    • @Dylaz97
      @Dylaz97 3 роки тому +2

      @@sgjoni Aye brother, best wishes from North East England!

    • @accaeffe8032
      @accaeffe8032 3 роки тому

      Upload the autosomal raw data file to mytrueancestry.com.

    • @ebrelus7687
      @ebrelus7687 3 роки тому

      Check gene channel about tollensee battle, there were noneuropean hunters gatherers in central europe spreading between baltic sea and even as far as serbia who added substantially to european gene pool in next ages despite the indoeuropean wave from eurosteppe. I see hungary as aberration and a cultural nonIE symbolic come back to europe monopolised by IE languages.

  • @bunnysparkles9453
    @bunnysparkles9453 2 роки тому

    I am Irish American. 97% Irish according to dna testing. I am a McKnight from cork. I have hemochromatosis

  • @janicewrye5010
    @janicewrye5010 3 роки тому

    my 3 great grandfather william Gorman born 1783 in ireland my 2 great grandfather Bartholomew O'Gorman was born i think around 1821 to 1826 in ireland my great grandfather John Gorman was born in 1846 or 1845 in ireland my grandfather was born in usa John Immigrated to usa in 1866 my family is directly related to the O'Gormans back in the 1200 ad

    • @cmumford1477
      @cmumford1477 2 роки тому

      I think we are related...Did John have a brother Tom?

    • @eamonnclabby7067
      @eamonnclabby7067 2 роки тому

      Hopefully post pandemic a clan reunion might happen...??

  • @davidturner4610
    @davidturner4610 3 роки тому

    My ancestral surname is Larkin a name synonymous with the area of Kinsella where the town of Wexford (Waesfjord) is located. I have blonde hair and my friends believe I’m Norse. Does anybody have an idea?

    • @gerx18
      @gerx18 3 роки тому +2

      Wexford was under Viking control at one time .

    • @Coni2009
      @Coni2009 3 роки тому

      @@gerx18 True, Wexford was founded by the Vikings, but that goes for many (most?) early towns and cities.

    • @nigelosullivan8324
      @nigelosullivan8324 3 роки тому +4

      A lot of Wexford names are actually Norman so French in origin. I spent a lot of my childhood in Wexford. A football team in my youth had names like Deveroux, Sinnot, Furlong, Fenelon, Whitty as well as the usual O’Briens and the like. It was a beautiful thing really.

    • @davidturner4610
      @davidturner4610 3 роки тому

      @@nigelosullivan8324 that’s a nice story I found out my surname was ‘Larkin’ before I was giving an adopted name an Irish friend said it’s a typical Irish name I’m not even sure if it originated near Wexford and have a nice day

    • @Coni2009
      @Coni2009 3 роки тому +2

      @@nigelosullivan8324 I suspect the same might be true of other parts of Ireland. My grandmothers family came from Mayo and was surprised to find that her name (McEvilly) is originally Norman Irish.

  • @brendanm4179
    @brendanm4179 3 роки тому +6

    Ancestry.com tells me I a 85% irish, 15% scottish. Myheritage.com tells me im 75% irish/scottish, 15% scandavian and 10% iberian :)
    So I dont know what to believe, I like the latter as it has tge possible basque and viking origins

    • @andersquist8436
      @andersquist8436 3 роки тому +6

      Just remember that pieces of DNA are not exactly the same as ethnicity. Some pieces of DNA are more common in certain ethnic groups, but we can't necessarily carve up a person's ancestry into ethnic categories by looking at DNA with perfect certainty. Ethnic groups overlap and so does their DNA. And genes on chromosomes act like cards in a shuffled deck. You are missing half of your mother's DNA and missing half of your father's DNA, and your siblings have bits you don't and vice versa. Things are lost and things are preserved in a chaotic way. So we are not like alloys of metal where every contribution is simply cut in half with every "merger" of two parents.

    • @anglishbookcraft1516
      @anglishbookcraft1516 3 роки тому +3

      The Scandinavian is surely Viking and Iberian is Welsh Celtic. The Anglo Saxons were west Germanic not northern Germanic so any Scandinavian is from the Vikings, not to remind you that Scotland was ruled over by the Vikings and the Dialect of Scotts even has a load of Norse words, though English has been affected too, namely in many everyday words like “muggy, gun, skin, sky, them, they” and many more, the framework of English has also shifted to northern Germanic grammar rather than its Saxish west Germanic one it had before. Scotland was the most affected though being that it was held for long stretches by the Norse. Also the welsh are the pre-Saxish folk, Wales is where they hold up mostly, and they’ve spread into Scotland and Ireland mainly.

    • @andersquist8436
      @andersquist8436 3 роки тому

      @Bruce Parkes I'm a viking. For sure.

    • @eaomonn1215
      @eaomonn1215 3 роки тому

      brendan mary martin?

    • @eamonnclabby7067
      @eamonnclabby7067 2 роки тому

      The declaration of Abroath references the Irish origin of the Dalriata sea kingdom, the decimation of the Picts and Kenneth Mcalpine filled the vacuum left by the Norse and Gaelic slaughter of the Picts, bit of a rough neighbourhood'...

  • @geraldafloris9715
    @geraldafloris9715 2 роки тому

    TUDO TEM UM PREÇO: Mateus 5:38, Gál. 6:5. E a natureza está retribuindo.

  • @anthonylondon3366
    @anthonylondon3366 3 роки тому +2

    After looking at all these graphs and clusters still mystified what Irish DNA actually shows.

    • @willjohnson353
      @willjohnson353 3 роки тому

      The first update was slightly more accessible - and more clearly presented ua-cam.com/video/6QjRHa7wASg/v-deo.html

  • @tommygamba170
    @tommygamba170 3 роки тому +2

    A 100 years isn't very old. Hell there's more Irish in America than Scotland and Ireland

  • @colleenkaralee2280
    @colleenkaralee2280 2 роки тому +1

    My great grandmother left Ireland to live in Texas, USA. She is said to have been what they call, "Black Irish", which I don't know what that means - she did have high cheekbones and black hair.
    If my dna shows Irish ancestry would the government allow me to make Ireland my home - permanent resident or citizen?

    • @eamonnclabby7067
      @eamonnclabby7067 2 роки тому +1

      Perhaps try the Irish Embassy for information, best wishes from the wirral..E

    • @bethbartlett5692
      @bethbartlett5692 2 роки тому +3

      Spanish influence "Iberia"
      Basque is also Iberia and *We (Irish that were there before the British established their group in N Ireland) are Basque that migrated North.* Then there's the waves of Invasion influences.
      Note: the Welsh and original English were also largely Basque, with some in Scotland.
      Scotts have Scythian influence also.
      The English males were all but 95% replaced by the Anglo, Saxon, Roman, Normans invasions. = largely Germanics.
      The maternal lineage remains similar to ours but is heavily diluted over time.
      The Irish with the most Basque % DNA today are those geographically located in Counties Kerry and Cork and also the 2nd to Basque in Rh(-)
      We are Gaelic rather than Celtic (depending on the defining of Celtic which remains a bit foggy)

    • @colleenkaralee2280
      @colleenkaralee2280 2 роки тому

      @@bethbartlett5692 I heard the Basque have a unique dental feature? Similar to Koreans?

    • @snopure
      @snopure 2 роки тому

      @@bethbartlett5692 Most scholarly literature defines Gaelic as a subheading of Celtic. Celtic is the generic term for both the people and the branch of the Indo-European language tree. Gaelic and Brythonic are more specific; not all Celts are Gaels but all Gaels are Celts.

    • @ladybug5859
      @ladybug5859 2 роки тому +1

      1/4 required & documented for access to enter n remain in Ireland

  • @jimorison6159
    @jimorison6159 3 роки тому

    💨

  • @spcm6781
    @spcm6781 2 роки тому

    On my family tree I traced back seven generations all within 30km and all within Co. Sligo

  • @MikeDial
    @MikeDial 2 роки тому

    This is definitely not for the layman. If the "so what" of this research came up, it went over my head.

  • @delong8998
    @delong8998 3 роки тому

    Uhm

  • @geraldafloris9715
    @geraldafloris9715 2 роки тому

    Sou LXX, 2João :6, Rom. 13:4.

  • @jeremiahshine
    @jeremiahshine 3 роки тому +1

    My Grandpa was an infant on the boat to the US in 1911 from the Dingle area. I'm told to watch out for hemachromatosis.
    Across from Foley's Pub in Inch is an old little walled cemetary. Every stone had a surname carved from my family tree.
    My Grandma was also a baby brought over to NY on the boat a year later. She was a Flaherty. I found our old castle, too. It was broken. Lol.

    • @eaomonn1215
      @eaomonn1215 3 роки тому +1

      We nearly all have too much iron in our blood in Ireland.

    • @jeremiahshine
      @jeremiahshine 3 роки тому

      @@eaomonn1215 Some equate liver problems with anger and its expression.

    • @eaomonn1215
      @eaomonn1215 3 роки тому

      @@jeremiahshine please dont mention livers...mines fucked its gonna put me in the grave soon...

    • @jeremiahshine
      @jeremiahshine 3 роки тому

      @@eaomonn1215 Myhrr was used for thousands of years to help the liver. I did a clean-out regimen and dissolved it in Everclear. It killed some buddies I didn't know I had. Liver flukes!

    • @meditationspace7966
      @meditationspace7966 2 роки тому +1

      @@eaomonn1215 Yeah, be sure to get checked with a doc for that. It aint a pretty demise.

  • @aarontighe553
    @aarontighe553 3 роки тому +3

    All right I'm at 6 minutes already and I've heard him say like 19 times what he's going to talk about without ever starting to talk about anything ... See you

    • @bruceh92
      @bruceh92 3 роки тому +2

      I'm about to bail after 23 minutes, lol.

    • @bdale5231
      @bdale5231 2 роки тому

      That's so poor! I'm glad then, that I'm reading comments _first._

  • @leomcguire7038
    @leomcguire7038 2 роки тому

    Is it possible to get this presentation without the extraneous noise, i.e. doors opening and closing, papers rustling, and other sounds that interfere with the talk?

  • @nibiruresearch
    @nibiruresearch 2 роки тому

    Geologists only talk and think in millions of years. They have different methods for determining the age of rock layers. However, there is one small problem. Ancient books tell us that a cycle of natural disasters threatens the earth and all living things. The cause of this cycle of disasters is a ninth planet in our solar system orbiting the sun in an eccentric orbit. Features of the natural disaster include a massive tidal wave, higher than the highest mountain, flooding, storms, rain, volcanic eruptions, earthquakes, and a fiery asteroid bombardment. That planet is surrounded by a gigantic twisting cloud of dust and meteorites. That cloud obscures the atmosphere, pollutes the water and covers the whole planet Earth with that dust. At the end of the crossing of this planet 9, the earth is covered with a horizontal layer of wet mud, a mixture of sand, clay, lime, fossils of sea and land animals, shells and the deposit of that dust cloud and asteroids. So every layer on our planet contains material with the same antiquity, perhaps many millions of years old: the deposit of extraterrestrial clay. If you don't know about this cycle, you have no idea how our history has evolved. To learn much more about planet 9, the recurring flood cycle and its timeline, the re-creation of civilizations and ancient high technology, read the e-book: "Planet 9 = Nibiru". It can be read on any computer, tablet or smartphone. Search: invisible nibiru 9

  • @cooperthehongkongdoggie2804
    @cooperthehongkongdoggie2804 10 місяців тому

    I am 85% Irish 5% Scottish and 5% Arab 🧐

  • @terrytzaneros8007
    @terrytzaneros8007 3 роки тому +3

    Scandinavia and the Maghreb meet in Ireland.

    • @user-ol3wk2ds9m
      @user-ol3wk2ds9m 2 роки тому +1

      Why do you say that?

    • @terrytzaneros8007
      @terrytzaneros8007 2 роки тому

      @@user-ol3wk2ds9m : genetics.

    • @user-ol3wk2ds9m
      @user-ol3wk2ds9m 2 роки тому +2

      @@terrytzaneros8007 what genetics do the Irish have that suggests they're part north African?

    • @terrytzaneros8007
      @terrytzaneros8007 2 роки тому

      @@user-ol3wk2ds9m Iberian.

    • @user-ol3wk2ds9m
      @user-ol3wk2ds9m 2 роки тому +2

      @@terrytzaneros8007 iberian is north African? As far as I'm aware, the moors didn't conquer iberia til much later. Also they didn't leave that much of a genetic marker.. The native iberians weren't replaced with moors..

  • @geraldafloris9715
    @geraldafloris9715 2 роки тому

    Jeremias 31:27 Eis que dias vêm, diz o Senhor, em que semearei a casa de Israel e a casa de Judá (Oriente e Ocidente) com a semente de homens e com a semente de animais. (Por que? porque o ser humano é o único que não respeita a Deus, as Criações e tira a vida até de sua propria espécie, e de seus filhos.)

  • @sumnerwaite6390
    @sumnerwaite6390 3 роки тому

    And their ancestors crossed “Doggerland” , from Europe, and before that, the Middle East, and before that migrated out of Africa. Migration patterns are fascinating!

    • @lionel66cajppppp0
      @lionel66cajppppp0 3 роки тому +6

      The out if africa myth has all but been debunked
      Its very more likely humans started somewhere around modern day Turkey

    • @andresa5554
      @andresa5554 2 роки тому

      @@lionel66cajppppp0 what the fuck are you talking about the oldest homo sapiens was found in north africa and homo sapiens originated in africa

    • @bethbartlett5692
      @bethbartlett5692 2 роки тому

      @@andresa5554
      It has had updates
      DNA Science is correcting the "Theory"
      See both "All Out of Africa" and "Darwin Theory on Modern Humans" are THEORY and *new finds should be updating these perspectives with actual Science based Peer Reviewed Findings.*

    • @bethbartlett5692
      @bethbartlett5692 2 роки тому

      Note T the subject replies.

  • @miriams76
    @miriams76 3 роки тому

    He didn't really reveal anything. I was hoping he would talk about kidney disease as my mum died from it.

  • @elizabethannegrey6285
    @elizabethannegrey6285 2 роки тому +1

    Why, oh why when the narrative is English are these INFERNAL and INACCURATE transcripts constantly flashing on the screen??!!! It is, to say the least, distracting; at worst infuriating.
    As someone of Irish descent I might have found this informative in another presentation.

    • @eamonnclabby7067
      @eamonnclabby7067 2 роки тому

      Hi Elizabeth ,The King in the North by Max Adam's ,might give some clear evidence of our origin stories 400 to 700 ad ,

  • @mikellacasa963
    @mikellacasa963 3 роки тому +3

    Basque DNA origin

    • @willjohnson353
      @willjohnson353 3 роки тому +3

      That was a theory put forward by Barry Cunliffe, Brian Sykes et al about 15 years ago, based on outdated DNA analysis, which the Irish DNA Atlas has actually disproven.

    • @ebrelus7687
      @ebrelus7687 3 роки тому +1

      Depends what do you mean by basque...

    • @bethbartlett5692
      @bethbartlett5692 2 роки тому +1

      @@willjohnson353
      It is accurate based on the DNA. There are Irish due to geographic location that have diluted Basque DNA over time.
      The higher % that still show strong Basque DNA are located geographically in Counties Kerry and Cork and they also have the higher % of Rh(-) blood type, 2nd only to Basque.
      The foundational genetic stock of post flood Ireland is Basque with some other earlier DNA in trace amounts.
      Much of what get identified as DNA (other than N European, Germanic, Anglo Saxon, Viking) *are also found in Basque, like: Anatolian, Sardinian, the Levant.*
      One must understand the Lab's frames of reference and their labels, and match these to the actual codes. R1B1 etc.
      Basque shows up as Iberian and in some cases Spain.
      In the past 200 years there's been a flow of Peoples through (in and out), plus those whom have been in the military, thus they have made an impact on the Overall Picture of DNA in the corresponding areas 9f Ireland.
      Those Irish boys do get around.

    • @eamonnclabby7067
      @eamonnclabby7067 2 роки тому

      @@bethbartlett5692 a couple of years ago a native of Boston MA clocked my accent to a tee, Derry ,a bit of Lancashire ( some American friends call it North country ) , and of course a wirral version of scouse

  • @SB-sj4uz
    @SB-sj4uz 3 роки тому +3

    Very interesting lecture, I just wish the presenter worked on his delivery skills first, because all of his sentenCES end on a HIGH, which is very irritatING, to listen tOO.

    • @bethbartlett5692
      @bethbartlett5692 2 роки тому +1

      💯

    • @eamonnclabby7067
      @eamonnclabby7067 2 роки тому +1

      I blame the watching of Neighbour's an Australian soap which caused a plethora of Jason and Kylie first names and verbal uplift at the end of words...even affecting..Mrs C and her scouse accent

    • @gke3800
      @gke3800 2 роки тому

      Constructive: just don't listen.

    • @SB-sj4uz
      @SB-sj4uz 2 роки тому

      @@gke3800 it's no good being a subject matter expert if your delivery is poor with distractions and mannerisms. It affects learning. So yes constructive criticism is good

  • @sasachiminesh1204
    @sasachiminesh1204 2 роки тому +1

    The written history of Eire is as accurate - or more accurate- than these sloppy DNA profiles.

  • @naradaian
    @naradaian 2 роки тому

    How he managed to be so boring is nothing short of miraculous

  • @jeffreyswaney5435
    @jeffreyswaney5435 Місяць тому

    He runs his mouth too much, get to the point....