The Armenia_C assemblage comes from the stratified occupation of Areni‑1 cave in Vayots Dzor, Armenia, within a Chalcolithic world of growing craft specialization and long‑distance exchange (dated here to 4350–3500 BCE). Archaeological data indicates repeated human presence in the cave complex: hearths, storage pits, ceramic assemblages, and organic remains. Notably, Areni‑1 has yielded some of the region’s most iconic finds — a well‑preserved leather shoe and evidence for early winemaking — that anchor this horizon in a landscape of domestic innovation and ritual practice.
Genetic data from five samples offers a narrow but tangible glimpse into the people who lived and worked at Areni: a mixture of maternal lineages typical of West Eurasia (H, K) alongside U4a, a lineage with deeper northern affinities, and an unexpected presence of Y‑chromosome haplogroup L (including L1a). Limited evidence suggests these genetic signals may reflect small founder groups, rare incoming males, or contact networks stretching south and east. Archaeological parallels in material culture link Areni to neighboring highland and lowland traditions, but the small sample count means any narrative of population movement must remain provisional. Future excavation and more ancient genomes will be required to move from evocative possibility to robust model.