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Genetic Geography of Ireland
by (LONDON - Reuters)
Irish Really are a Race Apart

Gaelic Genetic Geography

8 March 2000
LONDON (Reuters) - Irish geneticists have used surnames and the
male Y chromosome to reconstruct a one thousand year-old genetic
map of Ireland that shows the Irish really are a race apart.

``When you look at this old genetic geography of Ireland what you
find is that in the West (of the country) we are almost
exclusively of one type of Y chromosome,'' Daniel Bradley told
Reuters Wednesday.

The Y chromosome is passed down exclusively from father to son.
It is a favorite of geneticists because it accentuates
differences between populations.

``It is inherited as a unit so the information you get from it is
of a special type,'' Bradley said in a telephone interview.

Bradley and his colleagues at Trinity College in Dublin examined
the Y chromosomes of men with Gaelic surnames in the western-most
province of Connaught, and found that 98.3 percent had a group of
genes on the Y chromosome known as haplogroup 1.

``When you look at Gaelic surnames they are different in
frequency of Y chromosome types from non-Gaelic surnames,''
Bradley said.

In a report in the science journal Nature, he and his colleagues
said that even within Ireland they found differences.

More than 98 percent of men with Gaelic names in western Ireland
had haplogroup 1 but numbers dropped drastically on the east of
the Emerald Isle.

Much further east in Turkey only 1.8 percent of men carry
haplogroup 1.

``Ireland may tell us something about European diversity because
it is on the edge of Europe.  Genetic diversity follows geography
to some extent,'' Bradley said.

The researchers said there is a gradient of haplogroup 1 across
Europe starting at almost zero in the Far East to almost 100
percent in the west of Ireland.

One of the most likely explanations for this is that farming,
which was invented about 10,000 years ago in the near East and
caused a fundamental revolution in the way humans lived, spread
over across Europe with time but only arrived in western Ireland
about 6,000 years ago.

``Ireland has been relatively untouched by this and the other
great demographic movements because of its location.  That gives
us the ability to look at the west and surnames and to get a
snapshot of what early European genetics may have been like,''
Bradley said.