The genetic snapshot from 48 individuals (Italy_Imperial) combines uniparental markers and autosomal data to reveal population structure in Imperial Italy. Y-chromosome lineages are concentrated in haplogroups J (13 individuals), G (5), and R (4), with rarer signals of E (1) and T (1). These counts imply a male subset (n≈24) for which Y-DNA was recovered; J is the largest single lineage in that set. mtDNA haplogroups are dominated by U (10), H (7), and T (7), with smaller counts of K (3) and J (3), indicating maternal ancestry typical of Mediterranean and European populations.
Interpretation: Haplogroup J is frequently associated with Near Eastern and eastern Mediterranean ancestry and its relative abundance here is consistent with documented connectivity between Italy and eastern Mediterranean ports. Haplogroup G, often linked to Neolithic farmer ancestry and pockets in Anatolia/Caucasus, and haplogroup R, widespread in Europe, reflect layered prehistoric and historic inputs. The presence of E and T, though rare, aligns with known Mediterranean-wide gene flow. Autosomal profiles (where available) generally point to a majority local central-Italian genetic foundation with admixture proportions varying by individual and site.
Caveats: uniparental markers reflect single-line ancestry paths and small counts per haplogroup demand caution. mtDNA sample coverage (n≈30) and the male Y-DNA subset are moderate; thus, while trends are meaningful, fine-scale demographic modeling requires larger and denser sampling. Nonetheless, the genetic data corroborate archaeological expectations of a predominant local gene pool infused by Mediterranean and Near Eastern contributions at varying intensities.