The Armenia_EBA dataset comprises five ancient individuals dated between 3350 and 2354 BCE from Kalavan, Talin (including a cemetery context), and the Karnut complex. This small sample yields a preliminary but intriguing genetic snapshot: one Y-chromosome belonging to haplogroup R and a range of mitochondrial haplogroups—two U lineages, one X2f, one H, and one U7b.
Mitochondrial diversity (U, X2f, H, U7b) reflects maternal ancestries typical of West Eurasia and the Caucasus region across the Holocene. Haplogroup U in its subclades is commonly observed in prehistoric European and Near Eastern contexts; X2f is less frequent but present in West Eurasian assemblages; H is widespread in later European populations; U7b has ties to Near Eastern and South Caucasus maternal lineages. The single paternal R lineage aligns with a broad West Eurasian paternal distribution but cannot, by itself, specify precise migration routes or cultural affiliations.
Archaeological and genetic data together hint at a population with mixed local Caucasus affinities and possible inputs from neighboring regions. However, because the dataset includes only five individuals, all genetic inferences must be treated as preliminary. Low sample count limits the ability to estimate ancestry proportions, detect kin groups, or identify subtle admixture events. Future sampling from additional graves and settlements will be necessary to move from suggestive patterns to robust demographic models.