The Austria_N_LBK assemblage of 89 samples provides a relatively robust genetic window into early Neolithic populations of Lower Austria across 5500–4500 BCE. Genome-wide data align these individuals with the wider early European farmer (EEF) signal—substantial Anatolian-derived ancestry combined, in many cases, with increased proportions of indigenous West European hunter-gatherer (WHG) ancestry over time. This admixture dynamic mirrors patterns seen across Central Europe as farming communities settled and interacted with local foragers.
Unusual features in uniparental markers invite careful interpretation. The Y-DNA distribution here includes a notable count of haplogroup C (26) alongside G (14), J (5), H (5) and BT (1). If confirmed at high resolution, the elevated presence of C would be striking because haplogroup C is rare in later European Neolithic contexts; possibilities include a regional founder effect, male-biased gene flow from an unsampled population, or complexities in haplogroup assignment that deserve follow-up sequencing. Mitochondrial lineages—H (13), K (10), J (10), T2b (9), T (7)—are more typical of early farming communities and suggest maternal continuity with other EEF groups.
With 89 individuals, conclusions about population structure are stronger than for very small series, but questions remain. Further high-coverage genomes, refined Y-haplogroup subtyping, temporal sampling and comparison with contemporaneous hunter-gatherer and Anatolian datasets are needed to resolve the causes of the unusual Y-DNA composition and to map fine-scale demographic changes.