Group Administrator:
David Wilson - Email:
dcw@m222.net
- Email:
lochlan@aol.com
Project Surnames
M222+, R1b1b2a2e, R1b1b2e, R1b1c7
Project Background
NOTE: The formal publication of a revised haplogroup tree by the Y-Chromosome Consortium in May of 2008
has caused the relabeling of several haplogroups. In accord with the new YCC system, the branch of the
Y-chromosome tree defined by the M222 SNP and formerly known as R1b1c7 is now called R1b1b2e by Family Tree DNA.
To make things as confusing as possible, two additional SNPs have recently been identified and placed in the R branch of
the tree by the research team of the International Society of Genetic Genealogy (ISOGG). In their further revision
of the Y-chromosome tree, the branch associated with the M222 SNP is now called R1b1b2a2e. Any of these labels is
correct provided one specifies the labeling system used. That is, R1b1b2e (YCC 2008) is equivalent to R1b1b2a2e (ISOGG 2008),
and both are equivalent to R1b1c7 (FTDNA 2005 and ISOGG 2006-2007). For simplicity's sake, the Haplogroup can be labeled with its major haplogroup branch and the most refined downstream SNP -- R-M222.
The R-M222 branch of the Y-DNA tree is defined by a single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) called M222. This diagnostic marker is associated with many individuals whose roots lie in the counties of Northwest Ireland, Ulster and Lowland Scotland. The shaded footprint in the map at left shows the area where this profile is most often found. In no county is this pattern the dominant DNA profile, but in some counties (Donegal in NW Ireland, for example) it approaches 20 percent.
The map is intended only to show a population concentration; R-M222 individuals have roots within the oval but are not constrained by it. R-M222 individuals have been found in nearby areas outside the footprint -- in the Western Isles and in Orkney, for example, as well as in the North of England adjacent to the Scottish Border. A very few individuals have been found in Iceland, Norway and Germany.
The R-M222 project is open to all individuals who have a derived (i.e., positive) test result on the M222 SNP. The project also welcomes individuals who have not been SNP tested, but whose haplotypes show most of the following values:
DYS390 = 25
DYS385b = 13
DYS392 = 14
DYS448 = 18
DYS449 = 30
DYS464 = 15-16-16-17
DSY456 = 17
DYS607 = 16
DYS413 = 21-23
DYS534 = 16
DYS481 = 25 (FTDNA convention; = 24 EthnoAncestry convention)*
DYS714 = 24
*In March 2007 EthnoAncestry recalibrated their reports on several markers. Previous to that recalibration, the reported values for DYS481 in R-M222 individuals was 22 or 23, and those values may still be seen in older discussions of the haplotype in Internet lists.
In most cases the first three STRs in the list above are adequate to establish membership in this group. If you have at least two of those three values and differ by only one at the mismatching marker, you are very probably (though not certainly) a member of the R-M222 haplogroup. If you are uncertain about whether you belong to Haplogroup R-M222, please contact the project administrator and co-administrator for advice.
Though the R-M222 haplogroup is concentrated in Northwest Ireland and Lowland Scotland, there are exemplars in other parts of Ireland and Scotland as well as in Norway, Iceland, and on the European Continent. There is no geographical test for joining the R-M222 Project. DNA alone is the criterion.
Since the R-M222 project is a resource for individuals who have already determined a haplotype, it is anticipated that no one will order a DNA test through the R-M222 project. For that reason the project does not accept automatic enrollment of new test orders. To join the project, click the "Join" button at the top of your personal page, then "R" in the Y-Haplogroup section of the option list that appears, then "R-M222." Finally, click on "Send join request."
The cluster now known as the R-M222 group was first recognized in late 2004 following manual cluster analysis of several hundred R-M269 haplotypes in Ysearch. A preliminary modal haplotype was established at that time based on roughly six dozen similar haplotypes. It was noted that family names associated with the cluster were almost entirely Irish or Scottish. The cluster was initially referred to as the 25/11/14 cluster based on the dominant values for DYS390, 391 and 392.
In late 2005 a research team from Trinity College Dublin published a report that identified this cluster based on the distinctive values at DYS390 and 392. The research team called this pattern the Irish Modal Haplotype, or IMH, and provocatively suggested that the haplotype was to be associated with the Ui Neill kings of Northern Ireland who descended from the fifth century warlord, Niall of the Nine Hostages.
Since the haplotype is not in fact modal in Ireland – though a distinctive haplotype, it is a minor one – one should perhaps more properly call this pattern the Northwest Irish/Lowland Scots Variety of R1b1c. That recognizes the fact that it is most concentrated in Donegal (nearly 20 percent of the population) and nearby counties to the south and west (five to 10 percent). It is also found in Lowland Scotland and the Western Isles at a percentage that is hard to calculate but may also be in the five to 10 percent range.
In February of 2006, one of the administrators (DCW) predicted that the Northwest Irish/Lowland Scots variety would be found to correlate with the rarely tested SNP M222 and commissioned a custom lab analysis to test the hypothesis. The result, returned in March 2006, was positive. Immediately afterwards different labs began offering M222 as part of deep clade testing programs, and hundreds of individuals are known to have been found positive for the M222 SNP.
The modal haplotype for the Northwest Irish/Lowland Scots Variety, and therefore for R-M222, can be seen on Ysearch as record M5UKQ. Some modal values for markers in the extended test set have not yet been entered.
A separate simple website that reports some of the early statistics derived for the R1b1c7 haplogroup may be seen here.
An M222 mail list is maintained through Rootsweb.com. A link for joining may be found here.
Relevant studies:
Download the Trinity College Dublin Study (Moore/McEvoy) here. The raw study data can be found here.