Genome-wide data from four individuals at Mezőcsát-Hörcsögös provide a tantalizing — but preliminary — window into population dynamics at the Baden–Yamnaya frontier. Two male individuals carry Y-chromosome haplogroup G, a lineage often associated with Neolithic and local Carpathian farmers rather than classic steppe male lineages (such as R1a/R1b). This persistence of G suggests that male lines from earlier Neolithic or local Chalcolithic communities continued alongside incoming influences.
Mitochondrial diversity among the four includes haplogroups W, K, H-c, and J. This mixture of maternal lineages is consistent with a heterogeneous maternal pool and mirrors broader European mtDNA diversity during the Late Chalcolithic–Early Bronze Age. The presence of haplogroup W, less common in some earlier farmer groups, may reflect maternal lineages moving along long-distance networks.
Genome-wide ancestry profiles indicate detectable steppe-related components in some individuals, pointing to admixture between local Baden-descended groups and populations carrying western steppe ancestry. However, with only four samples, statements about admixture proportions, timing, and directionality remain provisional. Archaeological data indicates connectivity across river corridors, and the genetic signals align with a scenario of episodic mobility and intermarriage rather than wholesale population replacement. In sum: the genetic evidence illuminates contact and mixture at Mezőcsát, but further sampling is essential to move from suggestion to robust inference.