The Iran_HajjiFiruz_C dataset comprises five individuals dated between 6065 and 5720 BCE. This small sample size makes all genetic inferences preliminary and best treated as hypotheses to be tested by future sampling. Within these five, three carry Y-chromosome haplogroup J — a lineage widely observed in the Near East and often associated with populations rooted in the Fertile Crescent and adjacent highlands. On the maternal side, mitochondrial haplogroups include K (two individuals, with one designated K1a), U (one individual), and HV (one individual).
These maternal lineages are informative in broad strokes: mtDNA K is frequently observed in Neolithic farmer-associated contexts across Anatolia and Europe; U is more often linked with earlier Mesolithic hunter-gatherer groups in western Eurasia; HV has strong Near Eastern associations. Together the pattern is suggestive of admixture between established regional maternal lineages and male lines carrying haplogroup J, a scenario compatible with archaeologically inferred farmer expansions and local continuity. However, autosomal data, larger sample sizes, and temporally resolved sampling are essential to resolve demographic models. With fewer than ten samples, statements about population replacement, migration directionality, or precise ancestry proportions remain tentative.