The Czech_MN dataset comprises four Middle Neolithic individuals—a very small sample that limits strong population-level inference. Still, the genetic signals, taken with regional ancient DNA patterns, paint an evocative, if preliminary, picture of ancestry in Central Bohemia during the 5th millennium BCE.
Y-chromosome evidence: one observed Y-haplogroup I. This lineage is often associated in prehistoric Europe with hunter-gatherer paternal ancestry and its persistence here suggests that male-line continuity or admixture with local forager groups contributed to the genetic landscape.
Mitochondrial diversity: four distinct mtDNA lineages were recorded—X, T2e, W1, and H‑c. T2 and H derivatives are commonly found among early and middle Neolithic farming populations across Europe and likely reflect maternal ancestry related to Neolithic migrants from Anatolia and the Balkans. The presence of X and W1, less frequent but documented in both forager and farmer contexts, may indicate regional maternal diversity or retained local lineages.
Autosomal context (regional): broader studies of Central European Middle Neolithic populations reveal admixture between Anatolian-derived farmers and Mesolithic Western hunter-gatherers. Given the tiny Czech_MN sample, it is most prudent to characterize these four genomes as consistent with a mixed Neolithic gene pool in Bohemia rather than definitive evidence for any single demographic process.
Because sample count is under ten, all genetic interpretations remain provisional and benefit from future sampling and genome-wide analyses.