Three ancient individuals from Ain Ghazal, dated between c. 2557 and 1961 BCE, provide a slender but valuable window into Early Bronze Age genetic variation in central Jordan. Y-chromosome data include haplogroups J1 (1 sample) and J (1 sample), lineages widely associated with the Near East and common across the Levant in both ancient and modern populations. Mitochondrial lineages observed are H, X2m, and R—haplogroups with broad West Eurasian and Near Eastern distributions. These mitochondrial types reflect maternal ancestries that were geographically widespread and do not by themselves indicate sudden large-scale population replacement.
Crucially, sample count is very small (n=3). With fewer than ten samples, conclusions about population structure, migrations, or sex-biased gene flow must be framed as preliminary. The presence of J-lineages aligns with archaeological expectations of Levantine continuity, while mtDNA diversity hints at a mix of maternal ancestries—potentially reflecting long-standing regional connectivity. Archaeogenetic patterns from nearby Early Bronze contexts often show continuity with preceding Neolithic populations, punctuated by varying degrees of admixture; however, whether Ain Ghazal reflects local continuity, low-level gene flow, or more complex demographic processes cannot be resolved without larger, stratified datasets.
Future work combining additional ancient genomes, isotopic mobility studies, and contextual archaeology will clarify how these genetic signatures map onto social life, migration, and exchange in the Early Bronze southern Levant.