The genetic snapshot labeled Romania_N comprises five ancient genomes dated between ca. 6000 and 4300 BCE from Muntenian sites (Popesti‑Vasilati, Cârcea, Garleti, Urziceni). Mitochondrial DNA lineages observed are K (1), U3 (1), J (1), T2 (1), and H (1). These maternal haplogroups are consistent with patterns seen across Neolithic Europe where lineages associated with early farming populations (for example K, J, T2, and H) appear alongside haplogroups linked to indigenous hunter‑gatherers (such as U lineages). No consistent Y‑chromosome signature is reported for this small set, so paternal lineages remain undetermined in this dataset.
Archaeogenetic studies across southeastern Europe commonly find that Neolithic farmer genomes derive major ancestry from Anatolian‑Neolithic sources with variable admixture from local Mesolithic hunter‑gatherer groups. The Romania_N mtDNA diversity aligns with this broader picture, suggesting maternal networks that carried farmer-associated lineages into the lower Danube. However, with only five samples, conclusions about population structure, sex‑biased admixture, or the pace of local hunter‑gatherer integration are preliminary. Future sampling at greater numbers and with secure archaeological contexts will be needed to resolve fine‑scale demographic processes, such as whether gene flow occurred through migration of whole communities, mainly male or female migrants, or sustained low‑level exchange.