The genetic snapshot from these nine individuals is small but evocative. Maternal lineages are diverse: three individuals carry haplogroup T, two carry haplogroup D (an East Eurasian lineage), and single instances of H1u, H5, and K appear. This mix suggests both West Eurasian maternal ancestry (T, H, K are widespread in Europe and West Eurasia) and detectable inputs from eastern Eurasian gene pools (haplogroup D), consistent with archaeological models of steppe-mediated connections.
No consistent Y-chromosome pattern is reported across the small sample, so conclusions about paternal ancestries remain undetermined. Because n = 9, statistical power is limited: patterns observed here should be treated as preliminary. Still, the co-occurrence of West and East Eurasian maternal haplogroups aligns with broader ancient DNA studies showing that Hun-era and other Migration Period groups often carried mixed ancestries formed by steppe movements and local European gene pools.
Genetic data must be read alongside archaeology: the presence of East Eurasian mtDNA does not on its own identify cultural affiliation, but it does confirm biological connections across Eurasia during late antiquity. Future sampling, especially of male lineages and larger numbers of individuals from the same cemeteries, will be necessary to refine demographic models and test hypotheses about migration, kinship, and social structure.