Ancient DNA from two individuals at Krems‑Wachtberg yields a concise but meaningful genetic portrait: both males carry Y‑DNA haplogroup I, and both mitochondrial genomes fall within U5*. In broader Eurasian palaeogenomics, haplogroup I is strongly associated with European hunter‑gatherer populations, while U5 is one of the oldest maternal lineages known in Europe, often appearing in Upper Paleolithic and Mesolithic contexts.
These genetic assignments align the Krems samples with a continental tapestry of Pleistocene hunter‑gatherers, suggesting continuity of certain lineages in Central Europe through the Last Glacial Maximum and beyond. However, the sample count is very low (n = 2). With fewer than ten samples, population‑level inferences—such as frequency, diversity, or regional substructure—are preliminary. Future sequencing of additional burials and comparative analyses with contemporaneous sites will be necessary to test hypotheses about migrations, local persistence, or interactions with neighboring groups.
In short, the DNA points to deep European hunter‑gatherer ancestry at Krems, but the limited dataset mandates cautious interpretation.