The genetic dataset from Croatia_EN_Starcevo comprises three Early Neolithic individuals from Vinkovci-Nama dated to c. 5650–5450 BCE. Although small, these samples offer a window into the biological makeup of Starčevo communities in eastern Croatia.
Mitochondrial DNA: The three mtDNA haplogroups observed — HV, K and T2b — are commonly reported in Early European farmers across Southeast and Central Europe. These maternal lineages are consistent with an influx of Anatolian-related farming populations during the Neolithic transition.
Y-chromosome DNA: The reported Y-haplogroups include H and F. Haplogroup F is a deep-rooted clade ancestral to many downstream lineages and is sometimes encountered in early farming and pre-farming contexts; haplogroup H (Y-H) is less frequently observed in European Neolithic samples but appears in a variety of ancient settings. Given the sample size (n=3), these Y-lineages should be treated as individual observations rather than definitive population-level markers.
Overall ancestry: Archaeological and genetic synthesis suggests these individuals carry the characteristic Early Farmer genetic profile — predominately Anatolian-related ancestry with variable, often low-level, contributions from local European hunter-gatherers. However, with fewer than 10 samples, any inference about regional structure, sex-biased processes, or fine-scale migrations is preliminary and requires broader sampling to test.