Thanks for watching! Please let me know your thoughts below...
@FianFainFiatFaitArkangelCalel2 ай бұрын
The name Irland came from Ir the Brother of Heber and Heremon, that was killed by the tuatha The Dannan, in a horrible back stab betrayal. So heremon and Heber divided the Island after the Milesian conquest. and as a tribute named the island to their fallen brother IR-Land the land of IR. All the other stuff is tales of people that pass on and on and that know nothing at all!
@JangianTV2 ай бұрын
Very fascinating and brilliantly presented! Congrats on getting a sponsor too. 🙂
@celtichistorydecoded2 ай бұрын
Thanks, much appreciated
@KingfisherSeven2 ай бұрын
Very interesting - particularly the last piece on haplogroups. It is clear to me that those places in which I find myself so "at home" are quite literally in my blood...
@leightonmccormack2674Ай бұрын
Thank you for your work from an American Irish
@celtichistorydecodedАй бұрын
Thank you
@conor72562 ай бұрын
Really enjoyed the video. Just with regards to the Norwegian ancestry, the researchers could not tell what the percentage was, but they gave 20% as an upper estimate, which just meant that whatever the Norwegian ancestry is in Ireland, it could not be above 20%, but the did not know what it was. They did later research and found out that the average Norwegian ancestry in Ireland is actually only 7%
@celtichistorydecoded2 ай бұрын
Thanks
@gaynor1721Ай бұрын
*Norwegian.
@DorchesterMom2 ай бұрын
Thanks for this ❤ I have a lot of overlap with Rathlin 1; he’s my closest ancient dna match on gedmatch so he has a special place in my heart. My mito h6a1b2 is thought to have arrived in Ireland and the BI via the CW/BB - who absorbed yamnayan females as they moved west.
@noeldoyle4501Ай бұрын
Thanks for your great work.
@celtichistorydecodedАй бұрын
Thanks
@kerryl40312 ай бұрын
That explains my eye colours! Very interesting indeed. Thank you.
@celtichistorydecoded2 ай бұрын
Thanks
@Catkinscat4 күн бұрын
This is a very interesting topic and thank you for making this video. Could you tell me, did you say there was a DNA connection between the Basque people of Europe and the Irish people ?
@Cesare1232 ай бұрын
I want to visit Ireland ❤
@garrgravarr2 ай бұрын
Great vid, thanks. ❤
@DeirdreDoyle-f6iАй бұрын
Me also!
@nicholahenry539Ай бұрын
Thank you for this it is very interesting. I had my DNA done some time ago the highest is Irish Scottish and Welsh then the next is English and then Scandinavian I have four colour eyes and I had red hair but now it changed colour and my blood is RN0. I’m trying find my ancestors and see how far back I can go.
@keithlachtnain2 ай бұрын
I’m Irish but 1/4 Norwegian too
@VHVHVHVH-m3s2 ай бұрын
SAME BUT BROWN EYES, HOWEVER MY SON HAS BLUE EYES
@DeirdreDoyle-f6iАй бұрын
Hint is O negative blood? Only discovered 1961? We can donate our O neg but not receive other than another 0 neg. Few of us left!
@DeirdreDoyle-f6iАй бұрын
That's fun!
@radix1332 ай бұрын
Irish guy here and three percent of my DNA comes from Norway. Imagine my shock! Do I like fermented herring? No, but I plan to visit Norway and learn some phrases.
@gaynor1721Ай бұрын
@@radix133 3% DNA is considered a "low confidence" ethnicity estimate and is subject to change. I was first told I had 3% Norwegian DNA and that changed with the recent update. Now I'm 10% Scandinavian (5% Swedish and 5% Danish). No Norwegian.
@dlxmarks2 ай бұрын
Conan O'Brien said his DNA test came back as 100% Irish despite his ancestors, as far as he knows, arriving in the US in the 1870s. It would be interesting to see how that company defined Irish though.
@DorchesterMom2 ай бұрын
My husband is like this. He’s 100% Irish on several sites. When some of the Irish came here to America post famine, many settled alongside one another in smaller communities within the large cities (Boston in our case) by county of origin, with friends and family who also came over, and tended to set down roots within those communities. In my husband’s family, they strongly encouraged their kids to marry only other Irish-Americans. It was a way to hold on to their culture perhaps, especially after losing so much by having to come here.
@folksurvival2 ай бұрын
It just means a few generations didn't mix which isn't hard to believe.
@MasterJaggins2 ай бұрын
100% Irish is common, particularly on the west coast of Ireland. Ancestry companies used DNA samples from west coast Islanders who historically had the lowest foreign genetic influence due to their geographical isolation.
@johnheneghan29242 ай бұрын
Those DNA tests don't tell you how Gaelic irish you are. When they say 100 % irish they mean 16th century irish. (When people were settling in america) so that would include Norse, Norman, and Anglo irish genetics.
@fintonmainz78452 ай бұрын
"100 percent Irish" No DNA test can make such a determination. There is no "Irish gene"
@lugo_99692 ай бұрын
The english got Danish vikings. The irish got Norwegian vikings.
@Joejoejoe19672 ай бұрын
Ye I've got exactly that from either side
@North_sea_empire_Viking2 ай бұрын
I reckon that's right. My mother is Irish with Norwegian DNA. My father is English with Scottish, Danish and Swedish DNA.
@Granuaile12 ай бұрын
The Norwegians were the first to arrive but Ireland got both. The ‘Dubh Ghaill’ (dark strangers) were the Danes and the ‘Fionn Ghaill’ (fair strangers) were the Norwegians. Oxmanstown in Dublin comes from Ostman’s Town-the Ostmen (easterner) being Danes.
@North_sea_empire_Viking2 ай бұрын
@@Granuaile1 You're right. Paddy called them the 'dark' and the 'fair'. I'm sure all Vikings got everywhere, but mainly, Norwegian to Ireland and Danish to England is what history tells us, and in my personal experience, DNA results tally with this.
@erikeriksson3615Ай бұрын
The Swedish Vikings were in large numbers both in Norwegian and Danish raids so the difference between them is modern construction. Their leadership was Norwegian or Danish because they were in charge for the operation of their interest. Just like in Russia, Ukraine and the caliphate of the far east where the Swedish tribe of Rus was in charge. But with large numbers of both Danish and Norwegian Vikings also. Many in the British isles don't understand that both Ironorse and anglonorse become Vikings. Born in the British isles by Scandinavians and pure vikings. Also joined in this raids all over the Viking world. Exactly like the Norse from Normandy that becomes famous mercenaries all over the Viking world. The last hundred years of the Viking age everybody was Vikings from the Viking world. Not only from Scandinavia. But everywhere were their Norse colonised. A large world of northern Europe.
@williamcathcart79942 ай бұрын
Steven, thank you for the lesson. After an unwanted absence, I am back at um, and all caught up. I am an American by birth. A South Carolinian by choice and a Charlestonian by the Grace of God. The comments do give me a chuckle. One hundred and six-ty three years ago we started a war for our independence and that didn't end well. My Great Grand Father and his brother both fought under the bonny blue flag of South Carolina, alas. I'd be remiss if I didn't mention their grandparents left Glascow then Cloghmills on the way to South Carolina. My fine Irish friends could show me an act of great kindness by repatriating all of the want-to-be Irish Yankees which have sallied our soil for the past forty years. A single malt scotch or a shot of Bushmills, I like them both. Yaa Hoo !
@Sonny-m1fАй бұрын
🇸🇴⚔️🏴
@mawkernewek2 ай бұрын
7:22 There's a funny shape to the Welsh coast on that map. Is this from before Cantre'r Gwaelod was inundated?
@lyr1kn1562 ай бұрын
My genetic makeup is mostly Scottish and Irish, with a very small smidgen of Norwegian. Supposedly some in my family have DNA linking to doggerland, but I know nothing about that. I've personally traced the Scottish part of family as one of the earliest settlers during the plantation of ulster in the 1600s. One of my known earliest irish ancestors on the other hand was executed for his part in the 1798 uprising.
@lyr1kn1562 ай бұрын
Lol just got to the part of the video about Norwegian ancestry hahaha
@lyr1kn1562 ай бұрын
Wonder if my Irish ancestors' encounter with the viking was... Consensual at least 😅😬
@marcomolinero58772 ай бұрын
Look up "bones found under McCuaig’s Bar in County Antrim, Northern Ireland."
@ArthurMcdonagh-fk7ke2 ай бұрын
Great video
@celtichistorydecoded2 ай бұрын
Thanks
@foxgirl18227 күн бұрын
Most Irish people have (and have always had) shades of brown hair, from.light to dark. We are notca "red haired race" and never have been. Red hair has always been a.minority hair colour amongst Irish people. (Roughly 8%, at present). Even with the red haired gene being recessive it has never been that common amongst Irish people. The "stereotypical" Irish person is pale with light freckling, blue or green eyes and BROWN hair. Ireland and Scotland have a higher percentage of red heads then anywhere else but it is still a MINORITY trait, with red heads still being a small percentage of our respective populations. Tldr___The "red haired Irish" thing is a false stereotype.
@waynemcauliffe-fv5yf2 ай бұрын
I`m mainly Irish and my group is R-M269
@CelticDruidTempleOfBeliefsnewa2 ай бұрын
I'm irish and Scottish most of my tree also shows it different dates and branches I'm from Michigan
@Angel2009292 ай бұрын
🍀Love ☘️🤍❤️💛 all this information 💛❤️🤍☘️Love 🍀
@sunflower58322 ай бұрын
I'm 75 Irish and 25 Austria/ Hungarian interesting if that means 100 Celtic. The Austria Hungarian does not come up as German instead Slavic/Russian
@koreyoneal26232 ай бұрын
I would say that the first inhabitants were first creation/pre flood people , then post flood/Japhethites (sons of Noah) , then Lost Tribes of Israel/Scythian/Celts
@arthurrobey49452 ай бұрын
Our I haplogroup was the only one to endure an Ice Age in Europe. We were concentrated in the Balkans with the so-called "Neanderthals" (Jotnar or Jotun), consequently we have a high load of their genes. The R haplogroup were later arrivals. Newcomers, from our standpoint. It is no surprise that we were first in Ireland as we were the first to colonize the newly ice free land. This analysis will have to be updated to include the African influx.
@Myguyver2 ай бұрын
Basically Gaels, vikings and Norman's. Natives were the Gaels.
@Myguyver2 ай бұрын
@@xtramail4909 irrelevant
@xtramail49092 ай бұрын
@@Myguyver it’s not irrelevant because it disregards the history going all the way back to the Neolithic period. 🔆♾️
@Myguyver2 ай бұрын
@xtramail4909 I'm aware of that , my point is that as people evolve we eventually get the culture that has given the irish their flavor which is the Gaelic/Celts .
@DanSmith-j8y2 ай бұрын
The Ball-Breaker Culture.
@gaylehudson72672 ай бұрын
According the Ancestry DNA, i am 37% Irish. I have the look of it, for sure.
@TheLibraryChamberАй бұрын
Spain? The Milesians were from that peninsula.
@cindyhefferman260528 күн бұрын
Yes…she was Mary Magdalene
@AiaYoussef2 ай бұрын
Steven, you have a really interesting accent, what is it? (Just out of curiosity, English isn't my first language)
@celtichistorydecoded2 ай бұрын
Scottish
@1LyonsDenАй бұрын
My fathers line comes from Scotland his DNA is found in Aryshire as early as 900bc his DNA is also found in Ireland, Orkney, Isle of Man, Northumberland and England we are R1a.
@lisapinfold5062 ай бұрын
I have haemochromatosis. Thanks grandma😕
@a.brooks76562 ай бұрын
Is there a way to get your own genetic history both maternal and paternal identified? I would love to know which haplo groups are in my dna.
@gaynor1721Ай бұрын
Autosomal DNA tests.
@luckeOHara2 ай бұрын
by virtue and high repute
@Edarnon_Brodie2 ай бұрын
Are Irish people Celtic genetically? Yes, they are about 90% Celtic. The Haplogroup R1b is one of a few haplogroups which can be associated with one nation.
@jackieblue12672 ай бұрын
It's confusing the way you speak of Bell Beakers. The Iberian Bell Beakers are not the same population as the Bell Beakers like Rathlin who have the Steppe dna and carried R1b.
@celtichistorydecoded2 ай бұрын
They essentially are, and that's the same language the study used, not me. These are terms that we have made up today though, so this isn't an exact science, as they wouldn't have called themselves Bell Beakers.
@jackieblue12672 ай бұрын
@@celtichistorydecoded No they are different populations. The Bell Beakers originating in Iberia were racially different and had no Steppe ancestry. They were Neolithic farmers. Not the same population at all. The problem is in the name. Iberia did get the incoming Bell Beakers from the east as well but in the Bronze Age. You can research this as you will find they aren't the same populations. Even this paragraph from Wikipedia explains this. The earliest Bell Beaker samples in Iberia lacked Steppe ancestry,[60] but between ~2500 and 2000 BC there was a replacement of 40% of Iberia's ancestry and nearly 100% of its Y-chromosomes by people with Steppe ancestry.[64] Y-chromosome lineages common in Copper Age Iberia (I2, G2, H) were nearly completely replaced by one lineage, R1b-M269.
@jackieblue12672 ай бұрын
@@celtichistorydecoded You might want to read this study to get an understanding of the differences. The Beaker Phenomenon and the Genomic Transformation of Northwest Europe
@Angel2009292 ай бұрын
Can you message Manta Sleep Company design one for wear with sleep apnea mask head gear, thank you, or I can check there customer service support to ask
@eldraque45562 ай бұрын
sic, has there ben any attempt to connect all this with mythology?
@TheOsmanly2 ай бұрын
i am so honored that the celts and germanics were our rulers in Mesopotamia and anatolia and North of Syria thousands of years ago and i wish they rule us again.
@MasterJaggins2 ай бұрын
It goes against my beliefs that one racial group should rule over another However, I am flattered by your appreciation of our ancestors
@veronicalogotheti11622 ай бұрын
Spain doesnt have much r1,b Only one line the vasques
@veronicalogotheti11622 ай бұрын
The biggest slave trade was in ireland The vikings had it
@maiarostiashvili64892 ай бұрын
What does this three-leafed plant mean in Ireland?
@iainmc98592 ай бұрын
Its the shamrock (Clover). Its just a very common plant in Ireland (and in Britain). There is a story that St. Patrick explained the Trinity as being like the shamrock, Father, Son and Holy Spirit but all are unified as the one God. The story is probably made up ... but sometimes fiction is better than truth.
@maiarostiashvili64892 ай бұрын
@@iainmc9859 Thanks for the answer
@ArmandoBellagio2 ай бұрын
To be honest lookswise you couldn't generally tell the difference between Irish and British people, so there is definitely some relation there.
@MasterJaggins2 ай бұрын
I have to disagree, In terms of physiognomy, Gaels and Britons are quite easy to tell apart. Irish Gaels and Scots Gaels are tougher to differentiate however.
@veronicalogotheti11622 ай бұрын
The celtic from very old times
@gofiodetrigo87562 ай бұрын
on mute reading the transcript
@SpiritMattersCanada2 ай бұрын
There is little doubt that, from Dr Laara Cassidy's work at TCD on the most ancient DNA samples found in the West, that the original hunter gatherers were dark skinned and blue eyed. They probably traveled from Northern Africa, through Iberia (Spain) and the Basque country to the island. And yes, there were waves of Anatolian farmers, Norman and Viking invaders, as well as the 'Celts" fleeing Roman armies. Given all our ancestors are black, this information should not come as a surprise.
@FairHybreasalАй бұрын
Africa is a very big continent. If our ancestors were from there they would have more than likely resembled North Africans.
@Gunnersaurus12 ай бұрын
Betting this comment section is 99% seppo.
@pjccwest2 ай бұрын
🙂
@miriamwells352 ай бұрын
My DNA is 90% from the British Isles - mostly Ireland and Scotland. The remnant amounts were from Russia, Anatolia, Middle East and Africa. I am only 2% Scandinavian. I have dark hair, eyes and fair olive skin. Everyone thinks it’s Spanish etc. My grandfather had too much iron.
@veronicalogotheti11622 ай бұрын
They are more vikings
@Abbale2 ай бұрын
We don’t have any archeological DNA from the Norman conquest, so how could you say Normans left a very limited genetic impact on England?
@michaelcandido28242 ай бұрын
Some people do and the ones that’s do tend to have royal lines since most only married royalty or of noble families
@teamermia77412 ай бұрын
@@michaelcandido2824 Exactly. The Norman invasions resulted in a powerful elite class in England initially, and later in Ireland (and the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies). In all instances the mass migration of Norman populations did not take place. But in every instance the primary ruling class of invaded territories was mostly replaced.
@celtichistorydecoded2 ай бұрын
Major academic studies say that, not me
@MagnaMater2Ай бұрын
I guess it's today's people, the bretonic and normannic dna was done by the french.
@gaynor1721Ай бұрын
The Normans were 2nd and 3rd generation descendants of Danish Vikings. As the Angles were also Danish and Danish Vikings invaded the British Isles, both the Danish Vikings and the Normans left very little genetic impact on the British Isles or in British DNA as geneticists can't distinguish between them and the Anglo-Saxons had already brought Danish DNA to the British Isles.
@henkhemming66742 ай бұрын
i know what it's future DNA will look like...mééééhhhhhhh
@gunnarisaksson86772 ай бұрын
I have for a long time been impressed by the many red haired people in Irland. The red haired women is very beautiful in my eyes. This must be from the vikings.
@eaoryan6392 ай бұрын
A very English analysis
@celtichistorydecoded2 ай бұрын
I'm Scottish
@УправляющаякомпанияТОРГрупп2 ай бұрын
This fellow is so Irish that my cup of tea has turned into guinness!
@ArmandoBellagio2 ай бұрын
He's Scottish though
@franko28862 ай бұрын
Slāinte! Cheers!
@joannebrady61132 ай бұрын
I think he's Scottish
@Joseph131632 ай бұрын
He is scottish
@celtichistorydecoded2 ай бұрын
I'm Scottish
@peterkelly11392 ай бұрын
That's a strange accent you have...thought it was Scottish, but sounds like there's something else there...
@celtichistorydecoded2 ай бұрын
It's Scottish
@NoName-uz5ry5 күн бұрын
Glaswegian/Edinburgh, Scottish, Accent, I Think, Maby. YOU Look Like, Limmys Twin, Lol.
@Sonny-m1fАй бұрын
Published in peenass aye?
@BritishNaturalist-vb8hj2 ай бұрын
The way immigration is going in Ireland it won't be long before someone says black people have always been there & helped build the country,a bit like this place.
@BritishNaturalist-vb8hjАй бұрын
@@zuppymac-xi8rk Clearly you are leading a sheltered life.I't's been a thing in the UK for quite some time.
@BritishNaturalist-vb8hjАй бұрын
@@zuppymac-xi8rk That dos'nt sound true to me.Small villages throughout Eire are having large numbers of immigrants deposited upon them from what I can make out & many 'real Irishmen' are not happy with this,you seem very blase' to me.
@BritishNaturalist-vb8hjАй бұрын
@@zuppymac-xi8rk I did'nt say anything about it being a black problem that's a lie, you are doing what you progressive left wingers allways do hurl insults in order to shut down the conversation because you can't handle it. Multiculturalism is the problem & mass immigration is destroying both our Countries.If you can't see that then more fool you.
@BritishNaturalist-vb8hjАй бұрын
@@zuppymac-xi8rk KZbin deleted my reply & I have absolutely no interest in debating such a complicated subject in a childish environment like this one.I will just point out that the claim I mentioned black people is a lie & you base all your arguments on that.
@BritishNaturalist-vb8hjАй бұрын
@@zuppymac-xi8rk It's a matter of your identity quality of life & culture & if you cannot see that then heaven help your offspring (assuming that they are indeed Irish in the first place)!
@noahtylerpritchett26822 ай бұрын
I find it ironic the English and Scottish had more genetic impact on Ireland than the Normans. Because the Normans have cleared out half of the island's population basically but instead of being the genetic impact, their English and Scottish serfs were the proxy for genetic impact. I once read a report from ancestry that 80% of Ireland's population and diaspora has British ancestry from modern border modern ethnicity groups from Britain.
@xsamrx47182 ай бұрын
I'm 58% English and 40% Irish/Scottish 2% Baltic (Germany and Denmark) One side of my family came from Scotland the other from Ireland🤣 I’m incredibly pale and fair so I knew I had some Irish or Scottish blood in me somewhere 🤣
@noahtylerpritchett26822 ай бұрын
@@xsamrx4718 beautiful results
@iainmc98592 ай бұрын
There never was a large diaspora of Normans in Britain. They replaced the Anglo-Saxon aristocracy but not the general population who were derived of Celtic and Germanic stock. There were also previous 'movements' from Britain into Ireland before the Reformation (often called the 'Old English' ) from the Norman period onwards, families like the Burke's and the Fitzgeralds, who were Catholic. You have to be careful of your terminology. Serfdom had effectively disappeared in England by 1500, although tithed labour that replaced it wasn't much different in effect on the poor. Ireland had also tried to carve out kingdoms in Britain during the early medieval period (Dark Ages). The simple truth is there has always being population movement between Britain and Ireland, sometimes peaceful, sometimes less so; as in some places you can see the other shore from the coast on a clear day. When people from a similar genetically mixed stock move from one part of the British Isles (Ireland is part of the British Isles ... but isn't Britain) to another part their genetics is simply indistinguishable, which is where we fall back on History ... which may not be accurate either. The motto of this tale is - Never believe anyone who expounds simplistic viewpoints on Nationality, Ethnicity or who their Ancestors were ... including those companies promising to tell you where your DNA came from.
@noahtylerpritchett26822 ай бұрын
@@iainmc9859 exactly in England's case. In Ireland's case however, a million deaths and Norman birthrate average 8 kids and lots of cleared land to colonized, I'd think but turns out no. But instead the Normans planted English and Scottish settlers since day one not just the plantations period.
@iainmc98592 ай бұрын
@@noahtylerpritchett2682 Sorry Noah, I'm struggling with your meaning, so I don't know if we agree or not. I'm not disagreeing that the Normans had their eyes on Ireland, although the Normans in Britain thought of themselves as English, Scots or Welsh by the C14th. There has always been movement between the islands of Ireland and Britain for economic, political and military reasons; as I said some peaceful, some less so.
@KyIeMcCIeIIan2 ай бұрын
I'm descended from Gaelic royalty. We ultimately came from Scythia. We are the tribe of Hercules! Hercules was a Danite Jew named Samson, just ask any Danish person. Gaels are lost Israelites in the tribe of Dan. The royal family we left behind in Scythia later produced the notorious Odin.
@chrisnewbury37932 ай бұрын
Yes, though they may not have called themselves Gaels at the time. If you haven't yet, read "The Oera Linda". I'm also curious what you think the etymology of "Gael" is. I'm thinking it means wind, but that' just my own pet etymology. I saw a comment about the name of The Biblical Gomer meaning Gael Mer, which with my etymology would translate to Sea Wind.
@fionnmcnessa2 ай бұрын
The Gaels were from Egypt the buriel place of queen scota can be seen in county Kerry Ireland to this day Scotia married a syctian king . The Bruce explains the lineage in a letter to the pope
@noahtylerpritchett26822 ай бұрын
If Schizophrenia wasn't proven yet. You just scientifically verified schizophrenia.
@MasterJaggins2 ай бұрын
Ive looked into this theory before so I get where he is coming from albeit a poor delivery. I am laughing so hard at your comment, completely justified response :')
@KyIeMcCIeIIan2 ай бұрын
@@fionnmcnessa Gaels descend from a Scythian prince and an Egyptian princess. Scythian royalty descends from Hercules. Hercules was a Jew. Gaels are lost Israelites. Why worry about the female side? We are descended from practically everyone ever on the female side. It's the male heritage most people look at.
Interesting comments. Exactly where did that black people first to settle Ireland. Prove that with science before interjecting second-hand geedunk chatter
@silversolver78092 ай бұрын
What?
@EarlDennis-l1l2 ай бұрын
@@silversolver7809 geedunk is naval slang for water fountain gossip
@iainmc98592 ай бұрын
According to David Reich, DNA analysis has shown that Western Hunter Gatherers were typically dark skinned, dark haired, and blue eyed.[41] The dark skin was due to their Out-of-Africa origin (all Homo sapiens populations having had initially dark skin), while the blue eyes were the result of a variation in their OCA2 gene, which caused iris depigmentation.[42] Archaeologist Graeme Warren has said that their skin color ranged from olive to black, and speculated that they may have had some regional variety of eye and hair colors.[43] This is strikingly different from the distantly related eastern hunter-gatherers (EHG)-who have been suggested to be light-skinned, brown-eyed or blue eyed and dark-haired or light-haired.[44] Two WHG skeletons with incomplete SNPs, La Braña and Cheddar Man, are predicted to have had dark or dark to black skin, whereas two other WHG skeletons with complete SNPs, "Sven" and Loschbour man, are predicted to have had dark or intermediate-to-dark and intermediate skin, respectively.[45][26][b] Spanish biologist Carles Lalueza-Fox said the La Braña-1 individual had dark skin, "although we cannot know the exact shade."[47] According to a 2020 study, the arrival of Early European Farmers (EEFs) from western Anatolia from 8500 to 5000 years ago, along with Western Steppe Herders during the Bronze Age, caused a rapid evolution of European populations towards lighter skin and hair.[42] Admixture between hunter-gatherer and agriculturist populations was apparently occasional, but not extensive.[48] Evolution of Upper Paleolithic and Neolithic phenotypes in Eurasia. Dark-skinned western hunter-gatherers resided in Western Europe, and expanded to some extent towards north and eastern Europe.[42] Some authors have expressed caution regarding skin pigmentation reconstructions: Quillen et al. (2019) acknowledge studies that generally show that "lighter skin color was uncommon across much of Europe during the Mesolithic", including studies regarding the “dark or dark to black” predictions for the Cheddar Man, but warn that "reconstructions of Mesolithic and Neolithic pigmentation phenotype using loci common in modern populations should be interpreted with some caution, as it is possible that other as yet unexamined loci may have also influenced phenotype."[49] Geneticist Susan Walsh at Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis, who worked on Cheddar Man project, said that "we simply don't know his skin colour".[50] German biochemist Johannes Krause stated that we do not know whether the skin color of Western European hunter-gatherers was more similar to the skin color of people from present-day Central Africa or people from the Arab region. It is only certain that they did not carry any known mutation responsible for the light skin in subsequent populations of Europeans.[51] A 2024 research into the genomic ancestry and social dynamics of the last hunter-gatherers of Atlantic France has stated that "phenotypically, we find some diversity during the Late Mesolithic in France", at which two of the WHG's sequenced in the study "likely had pale to intermediate skin pigmentation", but "most individuals carry the dark skin and blue eyes characteristic of WHGs" of the studied samples.[52] Cut and Paste from Wikipedia ... although they probably chatted over computers and tested samples like Scientists rather than stood around shipboard water fountains and interjected with a lack of any professional knowledge and training !
@EarlDennis-l1l2 ай бұрын
@iainmc9859 This looks a lot closer to the 40k year marks for the blonde skin development of Ukraine and other northern indigenous humans from this era
@iainmc98592 ай бұрын
@@EarlDennis-l1l I think you're talking about Eastern Hunter Gatherers. The population of Ireland were Western Hunter Gatherers overlain by the Agriculturalists from the Middle East and then the descendants of the Pastoralist Yamnaya Culture, who may themselves have been descendants of the Eastern Hunter Gatherers. In other words, the population of Ireland has probably got paler over time due to genetics and climatic conditions.
@abhilashyadav22742 ай бұрын
Forget history , the current irish DNA is more page8 than curryland itself.
@johnpurcell75255 күн бұрын
Of course All Irish are descended from Morrocans Funny they don't look like Morrocans what Happpened
@NoName-uz5ry5 күн бұрын
Egyptian/SCYTHIA, &, Berbers, Not Moroccan.
@fortunatomartino85492 ай бұрын
Black people say they are the original inhabitants of Ireland
@fearls18982 ай бұрын
We were gaels n shiiieet
@nosotrosloslobosestamosreg41152 ай бұрын
And Japanese, Mayan, Atecs, Romans... tealing not only other people's bicycles but also history, g0ys.
@SeanPowell-p4v2 ай бұрын
@@fearls1898Nice👍
@michaelcandido28242 ай бұрын
And do you believe them? Cheddar man may have been dark but he was not African.
@richern27172 ай бұрын
Which Black people are you talking about ? African, Australian or Indian Dark skinned peoples ? Cheddar Man actually looked like a European except for the dark skin. Think of a dark skinned Indian/South Asia with blue eyes.
@Abbale2 ай бұрын
Irish are English
@lukegriffin24672 ай бұрын
What?
@teamermia77412 ай бұрын
As the English are mostly of Anglo-Saxon inheritance that statement is clearly untrue. It is perhaps only fair to say that neither the English nor the Irish populations are of significant Norman descent.
@FianFainFiatFaitArkangelCalel2 ай бұрын
palestians are jews - make it make sense!
@twitchypaper13912 ай бұрын
Greatest bait known to man
@genabalser16142 ай бұрын
Celtic
@asanulsterman10252 ай бұрын
Any article which depicts the Republic of Ireland tri-colour over the whole island is grossly insulting to the other country on the island and clearly counter factual.
@Mary420Jen42 ай бұрын
It’s insulting that you see Ireland as two different countries. As an Irish person I will never recognise the north as a separate country…. It’s just the land they stole from us
@barryb902 ай бұрын
Lad, that flag in your profile picture isn't even an official flag in any capacity. I think it's grossly insulting to call 2/3 of a province, a country.
@Mary420Jen42 ай бұрын
@@asanulsterman1025 furthermore if you know what the colours represent then it makes your point null and void 😂😂 imagine living in a land and not even knowing this
@asanulsterman10252 ай бұрын
@@Mary420Jen4 How can facts be insulting? ROI and NI are different countries, with different flags, whether you recognise it or not.
@asanulsterman10252 ай бұрын
@@barryb90 My profile picture is the official NI 100 years centenary emblem. I think it rather more insulting to have a foreign country's flag superimposed over the Ulster nations homeland, don't you?
@WhitebornEuropean2 ай бұрын
Hopefully fingers crossed🤞I will born as white european boy in my every life.
@NoName-uz5ry5 күн бұрын
C.H.D:- TIR-CO-NNOLL=TYR-NAN-OG.! Namaste. 🙏
@maximumsecurity9411Ай бұрын
The modern whites in Ireland are from German and Eastern European. Caucasians are descendants of Immigrants. However, the Original Irish were Black, that is the true DNA, before they were removed from their land forcefully. The original Irish can be found in Monserrat, & Barbados. The blue eyes are Eastern European! 👨🏾🎓🙏🏽👼🏽🙏🏽👨🏾🎓
@dechannigan2980Ай бұрын
That's baloney, First wave of ancient migrants were from Iberia present day Spain and Portugal Second wave Anatolia which was European before the islamic invasion... Third wave farmers from the European Steppe present day Ukraine and Russia. .