The Kilteasheen genetic series includes 39 sampled individuals, offering a moderate‑sized regional window into medieval ancestry. Y‑chromosome results show a dominance of haplogroup category R (27 of the reported Y calls) with a single I lineage (1), while mitochondrial haplogroups include U (9), H (7), K (4), J (3), and T (2).
Interpretation: the high frequency of R among male lineages is consistent with patterns widely observed in western Britain and Ireland across late prehistoric and historic periods, suggesting substantial male‑line continuity in the region. The presence of diverse maternal haplogroups—U, H, K, J, T—reflects a heterogeneous maternal ancestry pool, which may result from local continuity combined with episodic female mobility or assimilation of outsiders. Together, these patterns can reflect sex‑biased processes (for example, male continuity with more variable maternal inputs) but genome‑wide analyses and fine‑scale Y‑ and mtDNA subclade resolution are required to test such models rigorously.
Caveats: although 39 samples provide meaningful regional insight, they represent a single locality and temporal span; broader sampling, higher coverage genomes, and comparison to contemporaneous Anglo‑Saxon and Norman reference panels are necessary to distinguish local continuity from subtle admixture events. Where sample counts of particular haplogroups are low, conclusions must remain provisional.