The ancient DNA dataset from Midlum is very small (n=3) and should be treated as preliminary. Mitochondrial DNA (maternal lineages) recovered from these individuals includes haplogroups H, K, and U—each represented once. These mtDNA lineages are widespread in Europe: H is common in many post-Neolithic populations, K is often linked to Neolithic farmer ancestry, and U includes sublineages associated with Mesolithic hunter-gatherer heritage. Together, they suggest maternal diversity consistent with long-term population layering along the northwestern European coast.
No robust Y-chromosome pattern is available from the published Midlum samples (Y-DNA undetermined or not reported), so paternal continuity or turnover cannot be assessed for this site. With only three genomes, we cannot infer population-level structure; instead, these sequences provide tantalizing, individual glimpses. Archaeogenetic interpretation must therefore remain cautious: the mtDNA mix is compatible with regional continuity and admixture between local farmer-descended groups and older hunter-gatherer ancestry, and may also reflect contacts with neighboring Germanic communities.
When combined with archaeological context—burials, settlement patterns, and material links across the North Sea—these genetic results contribute to a nuanced narrative in which coastal Friesland was a mosaic of ancestries and identities. However, larger sample sizes and genome-wide data would be necessary to test hypotheses about migration, sex-biased admixture, or continuity with modern populations.