The genetic snapshot from seven individuals dated between 100 and 600 CE presents a maternal pool dominated by haplogroup H (3/7), with single occurrences of V16, T, N and K. Haplogroup H is common across Europe and particularly abundant in Mediterranean and Atlantic populations; its prevalence here is consistent with broad maternal continuity in the region through Roman and Late Antique times. The presence of V16, a sub-lineage detected in Europe, adds nuance but cannot on its own indicate specific migration events.
On the paternal side, two sampled males carried haplogroup R. R is a widespread European Y lineage (including branches such as R1a and R1b), and its detection here is compatible with long-term European genetic backgrounds or with movement of European males into the province via military service and trade. Importantly, only two Y-chromosome results were recovered, limiting inferences about male structure and mobility. Genome-wide ancestry patterns (autosomal data) would better resolve admixture between local Illyrian-descended populations, Roman settlers from Italy, and other Mediterranean or continental groups—however such analyses require larger sample sizes.
Because the dataset is small (n=7), statements about population continuity, replacement, or specific migration pulses remain tentative. Archaeogenetic interpretation benefits most when integrated with archaeological context: burial type, artifact associations and isotopic mobility studies all sharpen hypotheses about who moved, who stayed and how communities transformed during the Late Imperial period.