Sixteen individuals sampled from Church2 (Faroes) provide an Early Modern snapshot linking bones to biological lineages. Y-chromosome data show a clear majority labeled as R (12 individuals) with a single I1; a small number of male lineages are not assigned to named categories in the provided counts. Mitochondrial DNA is dominated by haplogroup H (12 individuals), with additional maternal types J, H17, U, and H5 represented.
The prevalence of mtDNA H suggests continuity with widespread Western European maternal lineages common across the North Atlantic; the paternal R majority is consistent with broader Western European and Atlantic signals observed in many historical-period populations, though the dataset does not specify subclades (e.g., R1b) so direct assignment to particular migratory events is not possible here. The single I1 instance aligns with a known Scandinavian-associated paternal lineage but is rare in this sample.
Genetic patterns hint at a community shaped by admixture across Atlantic networks—maternal continuity paired with a predominantly R paternal signal—yet these inferences remain provisional. With 16 samples the dataset is informative for local structure but modest in size: broader geographic and temporal sampling, and subclade resolution, would strengthen interpretations about migration, kinship, and sex-biased mobility.