Genetic data for the Russia_Alan group comes from a small set of six samples dated between 450 and 1350 CE. Because sample count is low (<10), conclusions must be considered preliminary. Nevertheless, the observed uniparental markers offer a window into population dynamics: two Y-DNA Q lineages and one R lineage (no detailed R subclade resolved in these counts), alongside diverse maternal lineages (W1, H, H5, U, HV).
The presence of Y haplogroup Q—often associated in broader studies with eastern Eurasian and some steppe groups—hints at connections or male-mediated gene flow from more easterly or northeastern regions of Eurasia into Alanic communities. Y haplogroup R, widespread across Europe and the steppe, is consistent with broader West Eurasian paternal ancestry among some males. Mitochondrial diversity (W1, multiple H sublineages, U, HV) points to predominantly West Eurasian maternal heritage, typical of many populations in the Caucasus and adjacent regions.
Combining archaeological context with the genetics suggests a mixed ancestry: steppe-associated paternal signals alongside local or regional maternal lineages, consistent with patterns of male mobility and female-mediated integration. Genome-wide data would be necessary to resolve ancestry proportions, admixture timing, and precise affinities (Caucasus, Iranian plateau, Pontic steppe). Given the limited sample size and temporal span, these genetic observations should be treated as suggestive hypotheses that require denser sampling and genome-wide analyses.