The Denmark_Viking dataset (78 samples) offers one of the more substantial regional snapshots of DNA from Viking‑age Denmark. Male lineages are numerically dominated by haplogroup R (23/78) and haplogroup I (11/78, including 2 I1), with single occurrences of J and E. Maternal lineages are led by mtDNA H (23/78), followed by U (15), J (11), K (6) and T (6). These distributions are broadly consistent with northern European population structure of the first millennium CE.
Interpretation: R and I lineages reflect deeply rooted northern European Y‑chromosome variation; their prevalence here matches patterns seen across Scandinavia and adjacent regions. The presence of single J and E Y‑chromosomes, and a variety of maternal lineages, points to low‑frequency inputs from further afield — plausible outcomes of trade, mobility, or earlier admixture. Because sample provenance spans urban (Ribe) and ceremonial/elite (Gl. Lejre) contexts as well as rural graves, the genetic picture likely blends local continuity with episodic long‑distance contacts rather than wholesale population replacement.
Caveats: while 78 individuals allow population‑level inferences, sub‑period analyses (early vs late Viking centuries) and fine‑scale geographic structure require denser temporal sampling. Low counts for certain haplogroups (J, E) make conclusions about their origins and routes preliminary.