Nineteen Early Bronze Age individuals from Bulgaria provide a window into population dynamics between 3400 and 2000 BCE. The observed Y-DNA haplogroups are primarily I (3 individuals), with single occurrences of G and H. Maternal lineages are dominated by mtDNA U (5), with K (2), T (2), T2f (1) and H (1) also present. These results collectively suggest a strong component of local Balkan ancestry, particularly on the maternal side where U lineages are often linked to long-standing European hunter-gatherer and early farmer mixtures.
The prevalence of haplogroup I on the paternal side aligns with regional continuity in the Balkans rather than wholesale replacement by Steppe-associated R1a/R1b lineages; however, the presence of non-local Y haplogroups (G, H) indicates episodes of male-mediated gene flow from neighboring regions. Genome-wide signals (where available) typically complement uniparental markers, revealing admixture between local Neolithic-descended groups and incoming elements — but with substantial local persistence.
Because this dataset includes 19 samples from specific sites (Merichleri, Dzhulyunitsa, Tell Ezero, etc.), population-level inferences should be treated as provisional. Limited geographic coverage and the modest sample size mean that rare or localized lineages could be underrepresented. Still, the combined archaeological and genetic picture points toward a mosaic of continuity and selective influxes — communities rooted in Balkan ancestry while engaged in broader Bronze Age networks.