Genetic data from the Portugal_EBA set comprises three individuals dated between 2200 and 1700 BCE, recovered from Évora (São Manços, Monte da Cabida 3). Among these, Y-chromosome results show a single individual carrying haplogroup R. Mitochondrial haplogroups are H, J and U — one example each — reflecting maternal lineages commonly observed across Neolithic and Bronze Age Europe.
Taken together, this limited snapshot hints at a genetic tapestry where local maternal lineages persisted (H, J, U are widespread in prehistoric Europe) while paternal lineages including R overlap with broader west Eurasian patterns. Haplogroup R (without finer subclade resolution here) is frequent in Bronze Age Europe and can be associated in some regions with steppe-related ancestries, but with only one Y sample the data cannot confirm sizeable incoming male-mediated gene flow into Évora.
Genome-wide affinities (where available) should be interpreted cautiously: with n = 3, statistical power is very low. Preliminary signals may indicate continuity from Late Chalcolithic populations alongside admixture episodes shared across Iberia during the Early Bronze Age. Future sampling and higher resolution analyses (more genomes, Y-SNP resolution, and autosomal ancestry modeling) are required to test hypotheses of migration, kinship, and social structure.
Limited sample count makes these conclusions provisional; nevertheless, these genomes are valuable anchors tying archaeological contexts at Monte da Cabida to the broader demographic currents of Bronze Age Europe.