Ancient DNA from three individuals excavated at Madinat Hamad (dated within 300–647 CE) provides preliminary maternal-line glimpses into Late Tylos–Sasanian Bahrain. The three mtDNA haplogroups observed — R2, T2b, and U — each carry broad geographic distributions in West, Central, and South Asia and in parts of West Eurasia. R2 is often associated with South-Central Asia, T2b has known distributions across West Eurasia and the Near East, and members of haplogroup U are widespread across West Eurasia.
Crucially, no consistent Y-chromosome pattern is reported for these samples (common Y-DNA haplogroups are not provided), so paternal-line inferences cannot be drawn from this dataset. With only three samples, conclusions are necessarily tentative: small sample sizes (<10) limit resolution and the ability to detect population structure, sex-biased migration, or temporal shifts.
Nevertheless, the mtDNA mix is compatible with a Gulf island that operated as a crossroads, receiving maternal lineages from both the Iranian plateau and the broader Indian Ocean world. This genetic signal dovetails with archaeological evidence for trade and mobility, suggesting that gene flow accompanied material exchange. Future sampling, particularly including male lineages and higher-coverage genomes, will be essential to test scenarios of local continuity, elite migration, or long-distance maritime movement.