The genetic snapshot from Khvalynsk II is tantalizing but preliminary. The dataset here comprises three individuals (sample count = 3), dated between 5198 and 4539 BCE. Paternal markers are recorded as R in two individuals and Q in one; maternally, haplogroups observed include U4d, U (unspecified), and H.
Y‑lineages labeled as R are notable because later steppe populations (e.g., Bronze Age groups) often show high frequencies of certain R subclades; however, the present data do not specify subclades, so direct lineage continuity cannot be assumed. The presence of haplogroup Q — while less typical for later Pontic‑Caspian steppe assemblages — indicates that multiple paternal lineages coexisted in the Eneolithic Volga. On the mitochondrial side, U4d and other U lineages are commonly associated with Mesolithic and Neolithic hunter‑gatherer ancestry in northern Eurasia, while H is widespread in European contexts; their co‑occurrence suggests maternal continuity with earlier forager populations alongside incoming or locally evolving elements.
Genomic ancestry analyses from broader regional studies associate Khvalynsk‑like groups with an amalgam of local hunter‑gatherer and incoming farmer or pastoral genetic components that later contribute to the genetic makeup of Bronze Age steppe populations. Given the very small sample size (n=3), these genetic indications should be treated as hypotheses: additional genomes and higher coverage data are needed to resolve population structure, sex‑biased admixture, and links to later Yamnaya and other steppe horizons.