Seven individuals sampled from Czarnówko provide a small but evocative genetic window into this Wielbark-associated population. Maternal lineages (mtDNA) in the assemblage—primarily T (2), H (1), U (1), plus H27 and T2b—are broadly consistent with mitochondrial haplogroups commonly found across Iron Age and later European populations, suggesting continuity of some maternal genetic threads in the region.
The paternal signal is more surprising: two individuals carry Y-haplogroup L and one carries a marker labeled AM. Haplogroup L today is most frequent in South Asia and is rare in northern Europe; AM is an uncommon designation in standard Y-haplogroup nomenclature and may reflect either a specific subclade label used in this dataset or low-confidence assignment. Such results must be treated with caution. Possible explanations include: limited sample size and stochasticity, rare but real incoming male lineages in the Baltic trade networks, misclassification due to low coverage, or contamination/artifact of analysis pipelines.
Because the sample count is low (<10), any population-level inference is preliminary. Archaeogenomic interpretation here benefits from combining these findings with isotopic mobility data, broader Wielbark and contemporary regional genetic datasets, and increased sampling to test whether the unexpected paternal signatures represent isolated anomalies or evidence of wider, previously under-recognized connections.