The dataset provides 36 modern samples from diverse Moroccan locales, a useful but moderate sample size for describing contemporary variation. Crucially, this upload does not include explicit Y‑DNA or mtDNA haplogroup assignments in the provided fields; therefore conclusions about lineage frequencies in these 36 individuals must be circumspect. Comparative population genetics of North Africa, however, offers a context: many studies report a mixture of autochthonous North African lineages, Eurasian inputs and sub‑Saharan contributions. Typical signatures include North African-specific mtDNA (e.g., U6, M1) and Y‑chromosome clades such as E‑M81, along with Eurasian markers (J, R1b) and sub‑Saharan L haplogroups.
Archaeological and historical periods known to introduce gene flow include Neolithic farmer expansions, Mediterranean trade and colonization (Phoenician, Roman), the early medieval Arab conquests, trans-Saharan slave routes, and more recent colonial and labor migrations. Admixture dating in regional studies often assigns major pulses to late Holocene events, but local patterns vary: coastal ports and imperial centers often show higher Eurasian admixture; interior and Saharan populations can preserve stronger autochthonous or sub‑Saharan ancestry components. Given the absence of haplogroup calls in this upload, we recommend deeper genomic analyses (autosomal SNPs, Y/mtDNA haplotyping, and ancient DNA from local archaeological contexts) to transform these archaeological hypotheses into testable genetic narratives.