The 35 sampled individuals provide a regional genetic snapshot spanning c. 6100–1100 BCE. Y-chromosome diversity is dominated by haplogroup G (6 samples), classically associated with early Neolithic farmers in Europe. Other Y lineages—C (3), T (2), R (2), I (2)—appear at lower frequency; R and I, present in small numbers, may reflect either local hunter-gatherer persistence or later gene flow. Because some haplogroups are represented by only a few individuals, those particular inferences are preliminary.
Mitochondrial diversity is strikingly farmer-associated: J (5), H (4), T2b (4), U (4), and K (3) recur across sites. Lineages such as J, K and T2b are often tied to Near Eastern/Anatolian farmer dispersal, while U-types are commonly linked to European hunter‑gatherers; their co-occurrence signals admixture between incoming farmers and resident foragers.
Chronologically, genetic data mirrors archaeological change: early Neolithic contexts are enriched for G and farmer mtDNA lineages, while later samples (Copper–Bronze transitions approaching c. 3000–2000 BCE) show increased frequency of R-associated signatures associated in broader European datasets with Steppe-related influx. Archaeogenetic interpretation remains circumspect: 35 samples are informative for regional patterns, but uneven geographic and temporal coverage, and small counts for some haplogroups, require cautious statements about population dynamics.