Eleven ancient genomes from Malak Preslavets give a window into the people who lived here between 5800 and 5400 BCE. The Y‑chromosome diversity includes haplogroups G (2), T (2), R (1), and C (1) among the typed males. Maternal lineages include T2e (2), J (2), U (2), H (1), and J1c (1). These markers together sketch a population dominated by ancestry associated with Anatolian‑derived early farmers, with detectable contributions from local European hunter‑gatherer lineages.
Interpretation: Y haplogroups G and T have strong associations in many early Neolithic contexts and are commonly interpreted as markers carried by incoming farming groups from Anatolia and the Near East. Maternal lineages such as T2e and J likewise reflect Near Eastern farmer maternal ancestry. The presence of U and H lineages, and the occurrence of Y haplogroups less typical for Neolithic farmers (R, C), suggests admixture with resident hunter‑gatherers or contacts with neighboring groups. Sex‑biased admixture is possible: in other Balkan Neolithic assemblages, male lineages often reflect farming introductions while maternal diversity retains more local variants, but with only 11 samples these patterns remain tentative.
Caveats: the sample size is modest; while patterns align with broader regional trends of Anatolian farmer expansion and local interaction, conclusions should be treated as provisional.