Ancient DNA from Abu Saiba currently consists of a single analyzed individual dated within the 200 BCE–300 CE range. The mitochondrial haplogroup is J, a lineage widely distributed across the Near East and Mediterranean today and known in ancient Near Eastern contexts. mtDNA J often reflects maternal ancestries connected to West Eurasian and Levantine gene pools; its presence in this Tylos-period individual is consistent with long-standing maritime links between Bahrain and neighboring regions.
No Y-chromosome haplogroup is reported for this individual, and autosomal data are either limited or unavailable for robust population-level inference. With only one sample, any claims about population structure, admixture, or migration are necessarily preliminary. Nevertheless, the single mtDNA result coheres with archaeological indicators of connectivity: lineages associated with the Near East could have arrived through trade, movement of small kin groups, or incorporation of non-local women into island communities.
Genetic expectations for Tylos-period Bahrain include potential admixture among indigenous Gulf, Mesopotamian, Iranian, and Arabian contributors, reflecting the region’s role as a maritime crossroads. Confirming such patterns requires larger sample sizes, multiple burial contexts, and high-coverage genome-wide data to resolve sex-biased mobility, kinship, and admixture timing. Until then, the genetic portrait of Abu Saiba remains a tantalizing, but tentative, glimpse.