The genetic snapshot from Ordona in this dataset is modest but evocative: four mitochondrial genomes recovered from human remains dated within the broad range 800 BCE–1200 CE. The matrilineal haplogroups observed are H+ (1), H5c (1), I (1), and T2e (1). These maternal lineages are broadly common across Europe and the Mediterranean and are consistent with a population possessing local European maternal ancestry with potential long-distance connections.
Because no consistent Y-DNA haplogroup is reported for these samples, and the male lineages are absent from this dataset, we cannot comment on paternal ancestry or sex-biased mobility. The low sample count (n=4) limits statistical inference: when sample numbers are below ten, patterns must be treated as preliminary. Nevertheless, the diversity of mtDNA types in this tiny sample hints at a heterogeneous maternal pool—compatible with archaeological evidence of trade, mobility, and interaction.
Genetic data, taken together with archaeology, suggests continuity of local maternal lines alongside contacts that could introduce new lineages. Future, larger-scale sampling and retrieval of nuclear genomes (which reveal ancestry components, admixture, and kinship) would be necessary to test hypotheses about migration, social structure, or population turnover at Ordona.