Seventy‑three genomes across more than three millennia provide a substantial window into Baltic prehistory. Among typed Y‑chromosomes (n=64) haplogroup R dominates (R lineages ~78%), consistent with widespread Steppe‑associated paternal ancestry in Bronze Age Eurasia. Haplogroup N (~13%) is present and likely reflects later or regionally specific connections tied to Uralic‑language‑associated groups; its appearance is spatially patchy in the dataset. Minor Y lineages (P, J) appear at low frequency, indicating additional male-mediated connections.
Mitochondrial DNA (n=59) shows maternal diversity dominated by U (~37%) and H (~32%), mitochondrial clades common across northern and central Europe and often associated respectively with Mesolithic hunter‑gatherer continuity (U) and Neolithic farmer expansions (H). The presence of T, J and K further highlights the mixed maternal heritage of Baltic communities. Together, these patterns depict a population shaped by incoming Bronze Age Steppe ancestry, enduring local maternal lineages, and later inputs linked to northern/eastern contacts.
Caveats: although 73 samples are a robust dataset for the region, temporal and geographic clustering of samples can bias frequency estimates; some haplogroup counts reflect only typed individuals. Interpretations should therefore be treated as regionally informative but open to refinement as more data accumulate.