4


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| Received: 518/4 Given: 108/0 |
Target: SouthDutch7991_scaled
Distance: 1.65% / 0.01647729
100.0 Welsh
Distance to: SouthDutch7991_scaled
0.01647729 Welsh
0.01849434 English_Cornwall
0.01872883 English
0.02094741 Scottish
0.02188690 Orcadian
0.02495363 Irish
0.02670768 Shetlandic
That's as expected, I always come up closer to Welsh on G25 than anything else except maybe Dutch ( hence the name ). I suspect either the Welsh samples here are skewed towards continental-like Welsh, or Wales in general is way more continental-like.
Target: SouthDutch7991
Distance: 0.0130% / 0.01302265
29.6 English
22.3 English_Cornwall
19.8 German_Erlangen
16.2 Swiss_German
11.1 Irish
1.0 Yoruba


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| Received: 17,309/214 Given: 16,887/0 |


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| Received: 17,309/214 Given: 16,887/0 |


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| Received: 17,309/214 Given: 16,887/0 |




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| Received: 30,127/159 Given: 35,329/35 |
Distance to: Grace_scaled
0.01848790 Irish
0.01963632 Scottish
0.01980300 Orcadian
0.02206228 English
0.02219810 Welsh
0.02454052 English_Cornwall
0.02493577 Shetlandic
Target: Grace_scaled
Distance: 1.8352% / 0.01835154
76.8 Irish
23.2 Orcadian
The Irish Brigade's battle cry at Fontenoy, "Cuimhnigí ar Luimneach agus ar feall na Sasanaigh," translates to "Remember Limerick and the treachery of the English." After seeing the devastation caused by the Irish Brigade, the Duke of Cumberland reportedly remarked, "God curse the laws that made those men our enemies".




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It's only because I've looked at genetic distance tables and Gedmatch results etc over the years. That is how I knew Irish and Scots were more distant. It is also logical when you think about it. Places like English Cornwall are closer to the European continent. Also English Cornwall have a higher amount of European Farmer. Ireland is an island off of another island it is going to be more distant to other populations. There are some exceptions though which make it interesting but it could be due to things like ANE being higher etc.
If you look at just what countries are closer and sometimes it's not because of geographic distance I'm interested in why? If you look at Irish and Cornwall below why is Polish closer to the Irish even though Cornwall is less isolated than Ireland? That sort of thing is interesting to me.
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The Irish Brigade's battle cry at Fontenoy, "Cuimhnigí ar Luimneach agus ar feall na Sasanaigh," translates to "Remember Limerick and the treachery of the English." After seeing the devastation caused by the Irish Brigade, the Duke of Cumberland reportedly remarked, "God curse the laws that made those men our enemies".


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^^^^Grace, I was talking about the alleged closeness to the Basques. Oppenheimer's faddish theory was one of your pet peeves, especially in the days when it was taken as gospel on the forums (a theory, like Jason Voorhees, that just won't die).





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| Received: 21,246/433 Given: 40,328/1,621 |
I don't want to be misunderstood. I don't defend Openhimer old theories or any special British/Irish-Iberian connection, and I know that R1b was brought to western Europe by Indo-European population movements. I'm just saying that there is a pre-Indo European substratum that gets higher the more west you go in Europe, which makes sense, since west Europe is like a last corner from the point of view of Indo-European waves coming from the east. And that pre-Indo European substratum peaks in Iberia (not talking about R1b, or anything of that sort, just saying) for being in the very west of Europe, and having been less affected by Celtic and other Indo-European waves compared to Britain and Ireland. But British and Irish, for their very western position in Europe, have more of that ancient substratum (peaking in SW England and Wales, but more diluted than in modern Iberians) than other northern Europeans.
Basque language would be the only linguistical remain of that ancient pre-Indo European substratum.
If not, then how you explain that Cornish and Welsh (in their more isolated position, without shores to open sea) are the closest Brits to Iberians?
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