Ancient DNA from four individuals attributed to Himera (500–400 BCE) provides a preliminary genetic window into this Archaic Greek community. The Y-chromosome data show haplogroup G in one male sample. Haplogroup G is broadly distributed in the Near East, Caucasus, and parts of Europe, and in Mediterranean contexts can reflect Neolithic farmer ancestries and later population movements; its presence here is compatible with eastern or island Greek connections but is not diagnostic on its own.
Mitochondrial diversity among the four individuals includes haplogroups U, T2, H, and T. These maternal lineages are widespread across Europe and the Near East in the Bronze Age and Iron Age periods, and their presence at Himera aligns with a mixed maternal ancestry: some lineages associated with long-standing European populations (e.g., U, H) and others common in broader Mediterranean networks (T2, T).
Important caveats: with only four genomes, interpretations are preliminary. Archaeological context suggests a port with regular inbound mobility, so the observed genetic heterogeneity may reflect transient individuals (merchants, sailors) as well as local families. Robust conclusions about population continuity, admixture proportions, or kinship patterns require larger sample sizes and comparative datasets from contemporaneous Sicilian, Greek, and Punic sites. Nevertheless, these early genetic results complement the archaeological picture of Himera as a crossroads of peoples and genes in the Archaic Mediterranean.