Saturday 16 December 2017

Irish The Most Happy With EU Membership in Europe


The Journal.ie has posted an online survey of citizens across the EU member States of how people feel they have benefitted from EU membership.

The European Parliament asked EU Citizens about how they felt about their country been part of the EU.

90% of those Irish polled felt Ireland had benefitted greatly from its EU membership.

Despite BREXIT moving in to Phase Two of neogtiations, 55% of UK people polled believed the UK had benefited too.

The Italians are the least happy with their EU benefits.

Study Shows More Viking DNA In Ireland Than Wales or England


Scientists have unveiled a detailed genetic map of Ireland, revealing subtle DNA differences that may reflect historic events.

In their sample of the Irish population, the researchers identified 10 genetic groupings - clusters - that roughly mirror ancient boundaries.

The results also suggest the Vikings had a greater impact on the Irish gene pool than previously supposed.

The findings are published in the journal Scientific Reports.

A team of Irish, British and American researchers analysed data from 194 Irish individuals with four generations of ancestry tied to specific regions on the island.

This allowed the scientists to work out the population structure that existed prior to the increased movement of people in recent decades.

Co-author Dr Gianpiero Cavalleri, from the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland, told BBC News that the differences between the different Irish groups were "really subtle".

He told BBC News: "We're only picking them up now because, first of all, the data sets are getting really big." The other reason, he said, was because of "really clever analytical approaches to pick out these very slight differences that generate the clusters".

The study builds on a similar one for Britain, which was published in 2015.

Recent studies of DNA from ancient remains suggest that, broadly-speaking, the Irish genetic landscape was established by the Bronze Age, when migrants from mainland Europe - probably belonging to the Beaker archaeological culture - had settled on the island.

It's possible that these Bronze Age people also spoke Celtic languages, though we cannot know this for sure.

The Celtic and Viking influence was also evident in the findings with relatively high levels of North-West French-like and evidence of West Norwegian-like ancestry identified.

The latest paper highlights more recent population-shaping events in Irish history. The locations of the 10 clusters identified in the Irish population seemed to reflect either the borders of the four Irish provinces - Ulster, Leinster, Munster and Connacht - or historical kingdoms.

For example, the researchers found that Munster divided into northern and southern genetic clusters.

These appear to coincide with the boundaries of the Dál Cais and the Eóganacht - rival kingdoms established in medieval times.

But it might also be influenced by geography - specifically the mountains which carve up the landscape in this region.

"The likelihood is that it's a combination of these things - a little bit of geography combined with wars or rivalry generates kinship in each distinct area. And it's those subtle features that we're able to extract today," said Dr Cavalleri.

Of the 10 clusters, seven were found to be of "Gaelic" Irish origin and three of mixed Irish and British ancestry. All of the mixed clusters were located in Northern Ireland.

The geographical location of these three groupings, along with estimates of when the population mixing occurred - the 17th to 18th Centuries - led the researchers to surmise that this was related to the Ulster Plantation, when English and Scottish Protestants settled in Ireland.

The detection of Norwegian-like ancestry in Irish samples probably reflects migrations during the Viking era. While this component is relatively small (a maximum of 20%) compared to the native Irish background, the researchers were surprised to find it at higher levels in the Irish than in the Welsh and English (though at lower levels than those found in the Orkneys, with their traditional ties to Scandinavia).

However, Dr Cavalleri said it was possible the high levels of Norwegian ancestry in the Irish might be confounded if substantial amounts of Irish DNA had found its way to Norway over time: "Perhaps people the Vikings brought back," he speculated.

This could have the effect of reducing genetic differences between the two populations and making it seem as if the amount of Viking ancestry in Ireland is greater than it is.

Source: BBC, Paul Rincon.

Sunday 3 December 2017

Photos From The Archive: Survivors of The Sinking of the Lusitania


The National Library Photo Detectives on this photograph.......
Meet Annie and Edward Riley, and their twins, Sutcliffe and Ethel. We were amazed to find out so much about them. The Rileys had been living in Massachusetts, USA and were travelling to visit relatives in England during World War I. Their ship, the Lusitania, was torpedoed by a German U-boat off the Irish coast. The Rileys were incredibly lucky, as few Lusitania families survived intact. A great newspaper report (thanks, Sharon Corbet!) about their final safe arrival in Bradford ended: “After not sleeping for three nights, Mr Riley remarked that it felt grand to be back home again, surrounded by their friends and family.”

The Story of The National Library Photo Detectives
They hunt through family history sites for missing brides, soldiers and children. They pour over census records and cross reference leads against old newspaper clippings. When the going gets tough they hit the streets with maps in hand, or hit Google Streetview looking for figments of the past amidst the present. Sometimes they get lucky and a long lost relative gets in touch, or find a local with a good memory for faces and names.

They’re Photo Detectives and ever since the National Library of Ireland began posting images on Flickr in 2011 they’ve been figuring out the who, when and where hidden in old photographs. This crowdsourcing has proven effective as well as popular. To date the NLI account has almost 35 thousand followers and has received some 40 thousand comments.

The more than 5 million photos held by the NLI span over 150 years of history, but don’t necessarily have captions or other information identifying people, places and dates. Posting images online and inviting amateur sleuths to track down a photograph’s details is the only practical way to fill in a lot of blanks

New images are posted almost daily, accompanied by whatever information archivists have on hand. Sometimes the crowdsourcing focuses on figuring out the basics of who’s in a picture and where it was taken.

Other times, the mystery is a matter of context, unearthing the story behind a photograph by digging into the details of a long lost trade or a piece of antiquated equipment. Comments become an evolving conversation of facts revealed and checked, congratulations and personal anecdotes shared.

As things take shape, NLI’s Flickr curator updates descriptions to reflect what discoveries have been made. The process is intentionally bouncy and fun, more like a game with a play-by-play announcer than a night in doing homework.

An exhibition featuring 26 photographs, annotated with crowdsourced information and context, is free and open to the public seven days a week.

Photo Detectives runs through until September 2018 at the National Photographic Archive in Temple Bar, Dublin.

https://www.flickr.com/nationallibraryarchive