Ancient DNA from four Early Neolithic individuals at Ifri n'Amr or Moussa offers a rare genetic window into the Maghreb's Neolithic frontier, but interpretations must be cautious. Three individuals carried mtDNA haplogroup U — a lineage widely associated with Palaeolithic and Mesolithic populations across Europe and North Africa — while one carried mtDNA M, a less common maternal lineage in the region that could reflect deep local ancestry or low-level connections to southwestern Eurasian gene pools. On the paternal side, a single observed Y-haplogroup E is consistent with broader North African and sub-Saharan distributions, but one Y sample cannot establish frequencies.
Overall, the mitochondrial dominance of U hints at continuity with older North African maternal lineages through the Epipalaeolithic–Neolithic transition. The presence of mtDNA M and the E Y-lineage suggest a complex tapestry of ancestries, where local survival, occasional incoming lineages, and regional interaction all plausibly contributed. Because the dataset comprises only four genomes, these patterns are preliminary: larger sample sizes across multiple sites will be needed to test hypotheses about migration, sex-biased gene flow, and the genetic impact of early farming in the Maghreb.