Ten genomes from Beirut (Lebanon_IA3) provide a first glimpse into Iron Age III ancestry in the city. Among Y-chromosome results, haplogroup J appears most frequently (4 of the male-associated profiles), with single observations of G, H, and I. Mitochondrial DNA is dominated by haplogroup T (4), with R (2), W6 (1), U1a (1), and I (1) also present. Not all individuals produced complete Y or mtDNA calls; some samples were unassigned or low coverage.
These patterns align with archaeological expectations: haplogroup J is common across the Near East and is consistent with local Levantine paternal continuity. The presence of G, H, and I—lineages that have broader distributions, including in Anatolia, the Caucasus, and parts of Europe—may reflect the long-distance maritime and continental contacts evident archaeologically, or they may represent low-frequency local diversity. Maternal lineages (T and R) are likewise widespread in West Eurasia and the Near East; their prominence here points toward continuity with regional maternal gene pools while leaving room for incoming maternal inputs.
Importantly, with only 10 samples, genetic conclusions are preliminary. The dataset suggests a mosaic of predominantly Levantine ancestry with detectable connections beyond the immediate region, mirroring Beirut's role as a trading entrepôt. Future, larger datasets and genome-wide analyses will be needed to quantify admixture proportions, sex-biased mobility, and temporal change through the Iron Age.