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GREEN GENES
By Sean Henahan, Access Excellence
DUBLIN-
A team of geneticists here are conducting a study to
determine the origins of the Irish people and their relation to
other peoples around Europe. By analysing small segments of DNA
from Irish people in different parts of the country and comparing
them with corresponding DNA segments from people elsewhere around
Europe the Dublin investigators hope to provide a DNA fingerprint
of Irishness.
Their research may also help determine how much of their
descent the Irish may trace from the Celtic settlers who started
arriving in Ireland around 600 BC, and how much may instead
derive from the previous inhabitants of the island, who first
began to arrive there several thousands of years previously, Dr.
Dan Bradley, Department of Genetics, Trinity College, Dublin,
said in an interview.
Dr. Bradley and his associates are taking blood samples from
people in the more remote rural inland areas of Ireland which are
historically least prone to racial admixture. They will then
analyse certain highly variable repeat sequences of DNA that
occur between chromosomal genes and compare them to other
population groupa around the world.
The findings of the Irish study will be incorporated into a
large multicenter study of different population groups throughout
Europe and with a worldwide study being carried out by a team in
Stanford University in California, Dr. Bradley said.
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