Genetic sampling at CRL Arman comprises nine individuals (sample count = 9), a small dataset that must be treated as preliminary. Maternal lineages recovered include mtDNA K (2 individuals), J1c (1), U (1), H+ (1), and H1 (1). These mtDNA types are informative in broad strokes: haplogroup K and J1c are frequently associated with Neolithic farmer-derived maternal ancestry across Europe, while U and H clades have deeper Paleolithic and Mesolithic roots and long-standing presence in later prehistoric populations.
Notably, there is no consistent Y-DNA signal reported for this ensemble, so paternal lineage inferences are not possible from these samples. Because key Bronze Age demographic changes in Europe often involved shifts in paternal lineages (e.g., steppe-associated Y haplogroups), the absence of Y-DNA here limits conclusions about male-mediated migrations.
Population-genetic interpretation must emphasize uncertainty: with fewer than 10 individuals, observed mtDNA proportions can be shaped by chance, kinship within burial groups, and sampling bias. Nevertheless, the mix of maternal haplogroups suggests a community where Neolithic-derived farmer ancestry persisted alongside older European maternal lineages—consistent with a mosaic of local continuity and incoming influences inferred from regional archaeological patterns.