Genetic data for the Croatia_LBA_EIA group are extremely limited: three samples tied to Velim-Kosa and Jazinka Cave. All three yielded mitochondrial DNA results—two HV haplotypes and one H—while no consistent Y-chromosome signature is currently reported for this set. Because the sample count is fewer than ten, conclusions must remain provisional.
mtDNA haplogroups H and HV are common across Europe during the Bronze and Iron Ages and persist today; their presence here indicates maternal line continuity with broader European maternal lineages rather than a unique local founder event. The absence of reliable Y-DNA data in these samples leaves paternal ancestry unresolved: questions about continuity versus incoming male-mediated gene flow during the Late Bronze–Early Iron Age transition cannot be answered from this dataset alone.
Archaeogenetic studies elsewhere in the Balkans have documented a mosaic of ancestry components—local Neolithic farmer ancestry, late Neolithic/Bronze Age steppe-derived signals, and later Iron Age heterogeneity. The Croatia_LBA_EIA mtDNA results are compatible with such regional complexity but cannot, by themselves, resolve demographic processes. Expanded sampling, especially of well-provenanced burials and successful nuclear DNA extraction, is essential to link the archaeological narrative to population dynamics robustly.