The genetic snapshot from Sion-Petit-Chasseur Dolmen XI comprises three individuals dated to c.2500–1950 BCE. With only three samples, conclusions are preliminary and should be treated cautiously. Two of the three males carry Y-DNA classified broadly as haplogroup R — a lineage that, in other Bell Beaker contexts across Europe, is often associated with expansions of Steppe-derived ancestry. However, these data do not by themselves resolve which R subclades are present, nor the timing or source of male-line migration into Valais.
Mitochondrial haplogroups are diverse in the small sample: one K, one H, and one U. This mix mirrors patterns seen elsewhere where maternal lineages show continuity with earlier European populations alongside incoming lineages. Archaeogenetic studies often find that Bell Beaker-associated groups combined Steppe-derived paternal signals with a mosaic of maternal ancestries, suggesting complex social processes (sex-biased mobility, local incorporation) rather than uniform replacement.
Given the sample count (<10), any inference about population structure, admixture proportions, or social organization remains tentative. Additional genomes from the region and direct radiocarbon-dated individuals will be necessary to test whether the Valais Bell Beaker groups fit wider continental genetic trends or represent local variation.