Mitochondrial DNA from the Macedonia_IA assemblage shows a dominance of haplogroups commonly found across Europe since the Neolithic: H (3) and K (3), with additional lineages J (2), U (2), and T2b (1). These maternal markers align with a mixed ancestry profile seen elsewhere in the Balkans: strong continuity of Neolithic farmer–related lineages (H, K, J, T) together with remnants of older European hunter‑gatherer lineage U. Such a composition is consistent with archaeological expectations of long‑term local descent with periodic inputs from neighboring regions.
No consistent, high‑confidence Y‑chromosome pattern is reported across the 14 samples in the dataset, so paternal lineage dynamics remain unresolved here. Genome‑wide autosomal data would be required to quantify contributions from Steppe‑related, Anatolian farmer, and Mesolithic components for this population. Note that although 14 individuals provide meaningful signals, they are geographically clustered; therefore, genetic inferences are moderately informative but should be treated as provisional pending broader sampling. Future samples from more sites and explicit Y‑DNA reporting will clarify male‑line continuity, migration events, and affinities with contemporary and later populations in the Balkans.