Seventeen individuals in the Croatia_EIA dataset provide a modest but informative window into maternal ancestry during the Early Iron Age. The mtDNA record is dominated by lineages common in Europe and the Near Mediterranean: HV (3 samples), T (3), H3b (2), U (2), and T2b (1). These maternal haplogroups are broadly consistent with long-standing European Neolithic farmer and post‑Neolithic maternal diversity; for example, haplogroup H and HV are frequent across Europe, while T and U have varied histories associated with both Neolithic and later movements. Six of the 17 samples either carried less-resolved haplogroups or lacked confident mtDNA calls in the summary data, so the mtDNA counts should be seen as partial.
No clear common Y-DNA pattern is reported for this set, and archaeological records indicate that preservation and sampling biases often limit male-line conclusions. Because Y-chromosome data are undetermined or sparse, we cannot draw robust inferences about paternal ancestry, patrilocality, or male-driven migrations from this dataset alone. Autosomal ancestry (not summarized here) would be required to resolve contributions from Steppe-derived, Balkan Neolithic, and Mediterranean sources more precisely.
While 17 genomes are a useful start, the geographic clustering of samples and uneven preservation make broader population-level claims preliminary. Still, the maternal diversity observed aligns with a picture of the Early Iron Age Balkans as a place of mixed local continuity and connectivity, where long-established maternal lineages persisted alongside cultural exchanges across the Adriatic.