The genetic snapshot from seven individuals offers a preliminary window into medieval Estonian ancestry. Y-chromosome results: 3 individuals carry haplogroup N (commonly associated with Uralic-speaking populations across northeastern Europe), 2 carry haplogroup R (a broad European lineage), and 1 carries haplogroup J (less common in northern Europe and possibly reflecting long-distance contact or trade-related ancestry). Mitochondrial lineages are dominated by H (3) and U (3), with one T2b—profiles consistent with broad European maternal ancestry and older Paleolithic/Neolithic maternal lineages in the Baltic.
Archaeogenetic interpretation must be cautious. With only seven samples, kinship and population structure analyses are limited: small counts can overrepresent lineages by chance. Radiocarbon-calibrated dates (1180–1625 CE) anchor these genomes to the medieval period, but the low sample size means we cannot robustly quantify frequencies or demographic shifts. Technical caveats—coverage, DNA preservation, and potential contamination—affect resolution; where coverage is low, haplogroup assignments may be coarse.
Nevertheless, the mix of N and R Y-lineages alongside common European mtDNA suggests a picture of local continuity with episodes of male and female mobility. Future broader sampling and genome-wide analyses will be essential to test hypotheses about Uralic continuity, Hanseatic-era gene flow, and social patterns of marriage and mobility.