The England_MIA dataset comprises 98 individuals dated to 514–54 BCE from multiple English regions. Y-chromosome results are dominated by haplogroup R (48 samples), with small numbers of G (2) and I (1). Mitochondrial diversity is higher: H (25), U (18), T (10), J (9) and K (9) are common maternal lineages in the sample set.
These patterns suggest a strong presence of R-line male lineages during the Middle Iron Age in England, consistent with continuity from Bronze Age male-dominated lineages documented elsewhere in northwest Europe. Caution is required: the Y-results do not automatically identify specific subclades (e.g., precise R1b branches) without deeper sequencing, and autosomal genome-wide data are necessary to quantify admixture and regional structure. The relatively diverse mitochondrial pool indicates varied maternal ancestry, compatible with female mobility and complex marriage networks across the British Isles and continental neighbours.
Population structure appears regionally variegated rather than homogeneous. Some individuals show isotopic or material-culture evidence of non-local origins, echoing genetic signals of admixture seen in other Iron Age contexts. With 98 samples the dataset is robust enough to identify broad trends, but fine-scale inferences (micro-regional migration rates, elite-specific ancestry) remain preliminary without additional genomes and higher-resolution Y/mtDNA subclade data.
Overall, genetic data complements the archaeology: a landscape of local continuity layered with mobility, incoming connections, and diverse maternal lines.