Genetic results from the seven Dziekanowice-22 individuals form a striking two-part story. The mitochondrial DNA pool (H x3, K, W, U, HV) fits well within expected European maternal diversity for the medieval period. Haplogroups H, K, W, U and HV are commonly observed across Central and Northern Europe and are consistent with long-standing maternal lineages in the region.
By contrast, the reported Y-chromosome labels — S (2), M (2), PF (1), YP (1), I1 (1) — are unexpected for Central Europe. Haplogroups labeled S and M are typically associated with South and Southeast Asian or Oceanian populations in global phylogenies; their presence here is anomalous. Possible explanations include: rare male lineages introduced by long-distance mobility or trade; labeling or reference-mismatch in haplogroup assignment pipelines; or contamination and data limitations. The single I1 instance aligns with Northern European paternal ancestry and is archaeologically plausible. With only seven samples, any interpretation of male-line ancestry is preliminary. Further sequencing, reference reanalysis, and expanded sampling are essential to clarify whether these Y-lineages reflect genuine medieval gene flow into Greater Poland or technical/artifactual signals.