Fourteen genomic samples from Niederstotzingen provide a modest but informative genetic snapshot of an Alemannic community. Y-chromosome data show a plurality of R haplogroups (5 individuals) and at least one G lineage (1 individual). Maternal lineages are diverse — K1a, H, T2, I and X appear among the mitochondrial profiles — indicating a range of maternal ancestries in the cemetery.
Taken together, these patterns align with a common Early Medieval signature across central Europe: male-line continuity in broadly West Eurasian R clades alongside maternal diversity that can reflect local continuity, female mobility, or long-term regional admixture. However, with n=14 the sample remains modest; archaeogenetic inference at this scale must be cautious. The presence of G is notable but not diagnostic of a single migratory source. Likewise, mtDNA diversity—while consistent with mixed maternal origins—does not by itself reveal the timing or direction of gene flow. Comparative ancient DNA from neighboring Alemannic and late-Roman sites shows that Early Medieval communities often combine local Late Antique ancestry with varying levels of northern or western inputs. Archaeogenetic interpretations therefore emphasize probable continuity with layered episodes of mobility rather than one-time population replacement.