Ancient DNA was recovered from seven individuals at Beniamin (450 BCE–550 CE). Because the sample count is low (<10), genetic conclusions are necessarily tentative and described here as preliminary. Published metadata for these individuals does not report consolidated common Y‑DNA or mtDNA haplogroup frequencies; therefore, statements about specific uniparental lineages for this series cannot be confidently made.
Nevertheless, genomic context matters: broader ancient DNA research across the Armenian highland and the South Caucasus shows long-term population continuity on the plateau, with contributions from Anatolian, Iranian-related, and steppe-associated ancestries at different times. Archaeological chronology at Beniamin spans the late Achaemenid period and later centuries when imperial movements and trade could introduce new genetic inputs. The seven genomes from Beniamin may reflect the regional mosaic typical of the era — a dominant local substrate with admixture signals layered during periods of mobility — but the low sample size prevents robust modeling of admixture proportions, sex-biased migration, or temporal trends.
In short: the genetic data from Beniamin are valuable as initial points of contact between archaeology and aDNA, but expanded sampling, higher coverage genomes, and comparative datasets are required to move from evocative suggestions to firm demographic narratives.