Eleven ancient individuals sampled from the Lipetsk Don localities provide a compact but informative genetic picture. Ten of the eleven carry mitochondrial haplogroup U—a lineage often associated with European hunter–gatherer ancestry—while one individual carries W6a, a rarer maternal lineage in this region. On the paternal side, reported Y-lineages are sparse: two individuals assigned to broad haplogroup R, and one to J. The remaining samples either were female or lacked resolvable Y-chromosome calls in the available data.
Archaeological context and these genetic patterns together suggest a strong maternal continuity with pre-Neolithic European lineages persisting into the Eneolithic Don horizon. The prevalence of mtDNA U aligns with a model where local hunter–gatherer maternal lines remained prominent even as cultural practices shifted. The presence of Y-haplogroup R is consistent with steppe-related paternal lineages observed across Eurasia, but the dataset does not specify R subclades (e.g., R1a vs. R1b), so detailed paternal inferences are not possible. The single J call hints at possible connections or gene flow from more southerly or eastern networks, but with only one J and two R among three reported Y-chromosomes (and 11 samples total), such signals are tentative.
Limited sample size—eleven individuals—means genetic inferences remain preliminary. Archaeogenetic modeling benefits from larger, geographically diverse sample sets, so these results should be treated as suggestive evidence of continuity and emerging connectivity rather than definitive demographic history.