Genetic analysis of 82 individuals from multiple Argaric sites in Murcia offers a moderate-sized dataset for examining ancestry, kinship, and sex-biased patterns. Y-chromosome results show a strong predominance of haplogroup R (38 individuals) with a single occurrence of E (1 individual). Mitochondrial diversity is higher: haplogroups K (19), U (15), H (12, including H1 = 8), and T (4) are common. These distributions suggest patrilineal clustering alongside diverse maternal lineages, consistent with household-based social organization and possible male-line continuity in some lineages.
Interpreting these patterns requires caution. Haplogroup R in Europe is often associated with populations carrying Steppe-related ancestry in other contexts, but assigning broad migratory narratives to the Argaric record would be premature without genome-wide ancestry profiles. The mtDNA mix indicates enduring local maternal diversity and potential female mobility between communities. Kinship analyses at cemetery and household scales can reveal family focal points within settlements; preliminary osteogenetic ties at La Almoloya and La Bastida support the presence of related individuals interred in close domestic contexts. While sample size (82) is substantial compared with many ancient collections, geographic concentration in Murcia limits broader Iberian generalizations, and further genome-wide data will refine models of migration and social organization.