The Czech_BellBeaker dataset comprises 42 individuals dated between 2800 and 1800 BCE, providing a meaningful but regionally focused window into population change in Bohemia. The most striking signal is the predominance of Y-chromosome R lineages (27 of 42 male-associated samples). This concentration mirrors patterns reported across many Bell Beaker contexts in western and central Europe, where R lineages—often associated in broader studies with steppe-derived ancestries—become frequent during the late third millennium BCE.
Mitochondrial DNA among these samples is more diverse: U (12), K (8), H (6), with rarer types such as U4a and HV present as single occurrences. This combination—highly represented paternal R lineages alongside varied maternal haplogroups—points to sex-biased processes (for example, male-biased gene flow or social practices that favored incoming male lineages) combined with local female lineage continuity and admixture.
Caveats: while 42 genomes offer substantive resolution, the geographic concentration in Bohemia and uneven preservation across the 1000-year span mean patterns may change with expanded sampling. Comparative analysis with Bell Beaker datasets from neighboring regions strengthens the interpretation of a mix of incoming and local ancestries, but precise demographic models remain provisional.