Dáithí Mac Giolla. wrote:
As far as I was aware the vast majority of Irish ancestry is the same as the original inhabitants ?
That seems to be the case.
I've wondered that myself -all the Irish, millions of them, spewing out sprogs, must have altered the genetic topography so I'm skeptical of maps that are too discreet in showing differences
Dáithí Mac Giolla. wrote:
for example this map of the Haplogroup subgroup R-L21 shows it to be dominant in the "Celtic regions". I think I read over 85% of Irish inhabitants have it?
This could just mean the people at the fringe haven't mixed a lot over time and nowadays just happen to be the last speakers of the Celtic languages
Dáithí Mac Giolla. wrote:
lots of interesting theory's here
http://www.eupedia.com/europe/Haplogrou ... -DNA.shtml
and Maps. Love Maps evenif they oversimplify things
Interesting site! When I get the chance, I'm going to go thru it all and the side links. Interesting how R1b goes so far down into Nigeria and Cameroon, to an area occupied by the Fula people
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fula_people They are an ethnic group spread over many countries, mainly in West Africa and northern parts of Central Africa, but also in the Sudan area. Overall, the territory and range of where Fulani people can be found is significantly larger than the United States and Western Europe in area. So they must have picked it up somewhere on their travels. It just shows how intermixed we all are