The genetic signal from Ganj Dareh—derived from ten sequenced individuals—offers a cautious but evocative glimpse into Early Neolithic Zagros ancestry. On the paternal side, Y-DNA haplogroups include several carriers of R (4 individuals), one P, and one CT. These labels indicate a mix of broad West Eurasian-affiliated lineages (R) alongside basal or divergent lineages (P, CT) that underscore male-line diversity in this community. The data do not resolve deep subclades in every case, so the precise phylogenetic placement remains open.
Maternally, mtDNA is dominated by R2 (3 individuals), along with single occurrences of X, J, U, and HV*. R2 is today most frequent in parts of South and West Asia, so its presence at Ganj Dareh aligns with a regional Near Eastern maternal heritage. The diversity of mtDNA types hints at multiple maternal ancestries or local continuity with lineages that later contributed to West and South Asian pools.
Importantly, the sample size (10 individuals) is modest; while patterns of haplogroups suggest local Zagros affinities and internal heterogeneity, any larger inference about population continuity, gene flow, or relationships to Anatolian farmers and Levantine groups must be treated as preliminary. Future sampling across time and neighboring sites will be essential to disentangle demographic processes—whether the genetic mosaic reflects long-term local development, episodic migration, or both.