Genome-wide patterns across northern Europe show that Funnel Beaker groups typically derive much of their ancestry from Neolithic farmers who spread from Anatolia into Europe, blended to varying degrees with indigenous Mesolithic hunter-gatherers. The Denmark_EN_TRB_N dataset is small (n = 3), so conclusions must be cautious and framed as preliminary.
Within these three individuals, Y-DNA haplogroups include G (1) and I (1), while mitochondrial haplogroups observed are H (1), W1 (1) and U (1). Haplogroup G is often associated with early Neolithic farming lineages in Europe and may reflect Anatolian-derived male lineages or farmer-associated ancestry. Haplogroup I is frequent among Mesolithic and local hunter-gatherers in northern Europe and may indicate persistence or integration of local paternal lines. The mtDNA diversity (H, W1, U) is consistent with mixed maternal heritage seen in other Neolithic assemblages. Genome-wide data from broader TRB populations indicate continued farmer–forager admixture through the Neolithic; whether these three Danish individuals reflect local continuity, migration, or complex social practices requires more samples.
Because sample count is below ten, these genetic signals should be regarded as provisional; increased sampling across sites and time is essential to resolve patterns of sex-biased admixture, kinship, and population continuity.