Ancient DNA from Hemmor is tantalizing but limited: only three sampled individuals (n=3) from the site fall between 3367 and 2901 BCE, so any genetic interpretation must be cautious and preliminary. In this small set, Y‑chromosome lineage I appears once, while mitochondrial haplogroups U appear twice and K once. MtDNA U is commonly associated with Mesolithic and later hunter‑gatherer maternal lines across northern Europe; its prevalence here echoes the strong marine‑foraging signal evident archaeologically. The presence of mtDNA K—often linked to Neolithic farmer dispersals into Europe—suggests female‑line gene flow from farming populations or ancestrally agricultural groups.
Broad regional ancient‑DNA studies provide useful context: Pitted Ware–linked individuals often carry high proportions of local hunter‑gatherer ancestry, whereas Corded Ware/Battle Axe individuals in Scandinavia and central Europe frequently show steppe‑related ancestry and different Y‑lineage patterns. Hemmor’s mix of hunter‑gatherer maternal markers and a Y‑lineage associated with local continuity could reflect asymmetric admixture (for example, farmer or steppe females entering a predominantly hunter‑gatherer male gene pool, or vice versa), but with n=3 we cannot resolve sex‑biased processes or autosomal ancestry proportions confidently.
Archaeological and genetic evidence together point to a contact zone where maritime hunter‑gatherer communities and incoming cultural elements exchanged people, goods and genes—yet the genetic signal at Hemmor remains provisional until larger sample sizes are analyzed.