The genetic snapshot presented here is based on 87 modern samples collected across Turkey (Kayseri, Istanbul, İzmir, Aydın, Adana, Trabzon, Kütahya, Balıkesir) and including migrants sampled in Israel. This geographic spread captures coastal, inland and Black Sea populations, producing a view of high genetic heterogeneity typical of Anatolia.
Broadly speaking, Anatolia has acted as a genetic crossroads. Population genetic studies (general field consensus) indicate contributions from early Anatolian Neolithic farmers, later inflows associated with Bronze and Iron Age movements, and historical admixture from the Caucasus, the Levant, the Balkans, and — in the medieval period — Central Asian Turkic groups. Archaeological continuity in many sites suggests that local ancestry components persist, while successive waves of migration layered additional diversity onto the population.
Because specific Y‑DNA and mtDNA haplogroups were not provided with the input data, we cannot state precise haplogroup frequencies for these 87 samples. Instead, the available genetic context emphasizes admixture and regional differentiation within modern Turkey. The sample size (87) is moderate: large enough to reveal broad patterns of heterogeneity and regional contrasts, but susceptible to sampling bias. Interpretations should acknowledge that some signals (especially low‑frequency or localized lineages) may require larger, more evenly distributed sampling to confirm.