Twelve Late Chalcolithic individuals from Çamlıbel Tarlası provide a modest but informative ancient DNA dataset. Maternal lineages are dominated by mtDNA K (6/12), with additional haplogroups HV1 (2), T2b (1), H5 (1), and U (1). These maternal types are commonly associated with Neolithic and post‑Neolithic farmer populations in Anatolia and the Near East, consistent with archaeological expectations of agricultural communities.
On the paternal side, haplogroup G appears in 4 of the 12 male-associated samples. Y‑G is observed in multiple Near Eastern and Caucasus contexts and is often interpreted as part of the broader Anatolian/Levantine genetic substrate rather than a steppe‑derived signature. The mix of mtDNA and Y‑DNA here suggests population continuity with earlier Neolithic groups, along with the possibility of regional gene flow.
Caveats: with 12 samples the dataset is moderate — not exhaustive. While patterns point toward Anatolian farmer ancestry and local male continuity, the sample size and geographic coverage limit fine-grained inference about social structure, migration pulses, or sex-biased mobility. Future larger datasets and wider regional comparisons will refine these early conclusions.