The genetic dataset for France_GrandEst_EBA comprises nine individuals dated between 2840 and 1600 BCE. Because n < 10, conclusions must remain cautious and provisional. Still, the recovered signal aligns with broader Early Bronze Age dynamics in Western Europe.
Y-chromosome: Five of nine male individuals belong to haplogroup R. While finer subclade resolution is not uniformly reported here, haplogroup R in this period frequently corresponds to R1b-associated lineages that spread across much of western Europe after the late Neolithic. This paternal pattern is consistent with steppe-related ancestry movements that have been documented elsewhere in the Early Bronze Age.
Mitochondrial DNA: Maternal lineages are diverse: T (3), K (2), H (1), I4a (1), and one sample reported as R1b under mtDNA which may reflect a labeling discrepancy and should be verified. T and K are common in European Neolithic farmer-derived maternal pools, suggesting continuity of maternal ancestry alongside incoming paternal influences.
Interpretation: The juxtaposition of steppe-associated paternal markers and principally Neolithic maternal haplogroups points to a sex-biased admixture pattern seen in many Bronze Age contexts. However, low sample size, possible reporting inconsistencies, and uneven temporal coverage mean these genetic patterns are indicative rather than definitive. Expanded sampling and higher-resolution haplogroup calls would clarify demographic processes in Grand Est.