Anthropometric variation and the population history of Ireland.

Genetic variation among human populations can reflect a combination of contemporary patterns of gene flow and genetic drift as well as long-term population relationships due to population history. We examine the likely impact of past history and contemporary structure on the patterns of anthropometric variation among 31 counties in Ireland (made up of the two nations of the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland). Data for 17 anthropometric measures and parent-offspring migration on 7,214 adult Irish males were taken from the large data set originally collected by Dupertuis and Dawson in the mid-1930s (Hooton et al., 1955). Patterns of genetic similarity among 31 counties were assessed using R matrix methods that allow estimation of minimum genetic distances. These distances were compared to distances reflecting history, geography, and migration using matrix permutation methods. The results indicate that among-group variation in Ireland reflects past population history to a much greater extent than contemporary patterns of migration and population size. The midland counties are distinct from other populations, and their history suggests greater genetic input from early Viking invasions. A second major pattern in biological variation is a longitudinal gradient separating western and eastern counties. This gradient appears related to patterns of early settlement and/or a concentration in the east of later immigrants, particularly from England. Comparison of regional means with published data for several other European nations confirms these hypotheses.

[1]  M. Crawford,et al.  Human biology of the Irish tinkers: demography, ethnohistory, and genetics. , 1974, Social biology.

[2]  R. Kennedy The Irish; emigration, marriage, and fertility , 1973 .

[3]  Jeffrey C. Long,et al.  Matrix correlation analysis in anthropology and genetics , 1992 .

[4]  A. Mourant,et al.  Blood groups of the Irish. , 1977, Annals of human biology.

[5]  J. Relethford Genetic drift and anthropometric variation in Ireland. , 1991, Human biology.

[6]  J. Relethford,et al.  Population structure and anthropometric variation in rural western Ireland: migration and biological differentiation. , 1980, Annals of human biology.

[7]  C. Coon The Races of Europe , 1939 .

[8]  E. Makov,et al.  The Irish Famine and its sequel: population structure changes in the Ards Peninsula, Co. Down, 1841-1911. , 1986, Annals of human biology.

[9]  W. R. Williams,et al.  Isonymic analysis of post‐famine relationships in the Ards Peninsula, N.E. Ireland: Effects of geographical and politico‐religious boundaries , 1990, American journal of human biology : the official journal of the Human Biology Council.

[10]  H. Harpending,et al.  MIGRATION AND GENETIC DRIFT IN HUMAN POPULATIONS , 1986, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.

[11]  N. Mantel The detection of disease clustering and a generalized regression approach. , 1967, Cancer research.

[12]  W. Howells,et al.  Age changes and selective survival in Irish males , 1951 .

[13]  J. Relethford Genetic structure and population history of Ireland: a comparison of blood group and anthropometric analyses. , 1983, Annals of human biology.

[14]  L. Jorde The Genetic Structure of Subdivided Human Populations , 1980 .

[15]  J. Gower Some distance properties of latent root and vector methods used in multivariate analysis , 1966 .

[16]  J. Relethford,et al.  Craniometric variation, genetic theory, and modern human origins. , 1994, American journal of physical anthropology.

[17]  J. Relethford,et al.  Population structure and anthropometric variation in rural western Ireland: isolation by distance and analysis of the residuals , 1981 .

[18]  J. Relethford Effects of English admixture and geographic distance on anthropometric variation and genetic structure in 19th-century Ireland. , 1988, American journal of physical anthropology.

[19]  N. Ginsburg,et al.  Aldine university atlas , 1970 .

[20]  R. Sokal,et al.  Multiple regression and correlation extensions of the mantel test of matrix correspondence , 1986 .

[21]  E. Hooton Stature, head form, and pigmentation of adult male Irish , 1940 .

[22]  J. Relethford Isonymy and population structure of Irish isolates during the 1890s , 1982, Journal of Biosocial Science.

[23]  H. Dawson,et al.  The physical anthropology of Ireland , 1974 .

[24]  J. C. Trevor,et al.  Up from the ape. Revised edition , 1949 .

[25]  J. Relethford,et al.  Craniometric variation among modern human populations. , 1994, American journal of physical anthropology.

[26]  D. F. Roberts,et al.  A study of digital dermatoglyphics in Ireland. , 1991, Annals of human biology.

[27]  J. Relethford,et al.  Detection of differential gene flow from patterns of quantitative variation. , 1990, Human biology.

[28]  J. Blangero,et al.  Anthropometric variation and the genetic structure of the Jirels of Nepal. , 1989, Human biology.

[29]  N. Morton,et al.  Bioassay of population structure under isolation by distance. , 1968, American journal of human genetics.

[30]  A. Bittles,et al.  ABO and Rh(D) blood group frequencies in the Ards Peninsula, northeastern Ireland: evidence for the continuing existence of a major politico-religious boundary. , 1991, Annals of human biology.

[31]  W. A. Honohan The Population of Ireland , 1960 .

[32]  G. W. Dawson,et al.  The pattern of the ABO blood group frequencies in Ireland , 1956, Heredity.

[33]  G. Dawson,et al.  The frequencies of the ABO and Rh (D) blood groups in Ireland from a sample of 1 in 18 of the population , 1964, Annals of human genetics.

[34]  J. Pálsson Some anthropological characteristics of Icelanders analyzed with regard to the problem of ethnogenesis , 1978 .

[35]  D. Tills Red cell and serum proteins and enzymes of the Irish. , 1977, Annals of human biology.