Seven ancient DNA samples from Beniamin offer a rare genetic glimpse into a community spanning the late Achaemenid era through late antiquity. Because n = 7 is small, genetic conclusions must be explicitly tentative: statistical power is limited, and allele frequency estimates are sensitive to sampling bias and preservation conditions.
Comparative ancient DNA work across the South Caucasus and Armenian Highlands often detects a strong substratum related to local Chalcolithic and Bronze Age populations, with variable later inputs from neighboring regions (Anatolia, the Iranian plateau, and steppe zones). The Beniamin individuals may reflect this pattern of long-term regional continuity combined with episodic gene flow, but current samples do not permit robust quantification of ancestry proportions.
No common Y-DNA or mtDNA haplogroups are reported for the Beniamin set in the provided metadata; absence of reported haplogroups should not be read as absence in the past. Future sampling, deeper genome coverage, and comparison to larger regional datasets will clarify kinship patterns, patrilineal or matrilineal continuity, and potential mobility signals (e.g., non-local ancestry in particular graves).
Limited evidence suggests local continuity tempered by regional connection; however, with fewer than ten genomes the most responsible framing is provisional hypothesis rather than firm conclusion.