Genetic evidence from 11 Middle Bronze Age individuals from Croatia_MBA provides a preliminary window into ancestry and lineage. Maternal haplogroups are dominated by mtDNA J (4 of 11), with single occurrences of I, W, T and U. A single Y-chromosome sample carries haplogroup J. This pattern—multiple maternal lineages dominated by J and a sparse Y signal—may reflect continuity of post-Neolithic maternal ancestry in the region combined with heterogeneous male inputs, but small sample size constrains firm conclusions.
MtDNA J is known across Europe and the Near East and is often associated with Neolithic and later expansions; its prominence here is consistent with long-term maternal continuity since the Neolithic in many parts of the Balkans. The presence of other maternal lineages (I, W, T, U) underscores genetic diversity at the mitochondrial level. The solitary Y-J observation does not establish population-level paternal structure; Y diversity in Bronze Age Europe is often complex, and a single haplogroup instance can reflect local pedigree or sampling bias.
Genome-wide ancestry data would more clearly partition Anatolian-Neolithic, local hunter–gatherer, and Steppe-derived components observed elsewhere in Bronze Age Europe. Archaeological links to Adriatic trade and the Cetina cultural horizon hint at gene flow routes, but until larger genome-wide datasets are available, interpretations remain provisional. Given 11 samples, the results are informative but preliminary; increasing the number and geographic spread of analyzed genomes will sharpen the genetic picture.