Sixteen individuals dated between 1100 and 500 BCE yield an initial genetic portrait of Early Iron Age southern Bulgaria. Mitochondrial haplogroups are dominated by H (6 samples), followed by U (3), K (2), a separate H+ (1) designation and one J1c. This distribution is consistent with much of prehistoric and historic Europe, where haplogroup H is the most common maternal lineage, and U retains a legacy from earlier hunter‑gatherer ancestry.
Haplogroup K and J1c often associate with Neolithic farmer-derived maternal lineages across Europe; their presence here supports archaeological interpretations of continuity from the Neolithic and Bronze Age into the Early Iron Age. The relative abundance of H alongside U suggests a mixed maternal heritage: long‑term local ancestry enriched by Neolithic inputs and later regional gene flow. Importantly, available Y‑chromosome data are sparse or not consistently reported for this sample set, so male‑line dynamics — whether marked by continuity, local elite replacement, or incoming male migration — remain unresolved.
With 16 samples, patterns observed are suggestive but not definitive. The sample size allows us to detect broad maternal trends, yet additional genomes (especially autosomal and Y‑DNA) are needed to quantify ancestry proportions, sex‑biased movements, and fine‑scale population structure. Archaeogenetics and archaeology together paint a picture of continuity punctuated by mobility: people who shared mitochondrial lineages common in Europe while participating in new Iron Age cultural landscapes.