Six individuals from Nästegården were sequenced for mitochondrial DNA and present a mitochondrial profile dominated by haplogroup U (3 individuals), along with HV0 (1), J (1), and H+ (1). Haplogroup U is frequent in Mesolithic and some Neolithic contexts across northern Europe and often reflects continuity of local hunter-gatherer maternal lineages. Haplogroups H and J are widespread in later Neolithic and Bronze Age Europe, frequently associated with farmer-descended maternal lineages or admixture events.
Crucially, Y-chromosome haplogroups are undetermined or not recovered in this small set, and autosomal ancestry data have not been reported here, so assertions about the presence or proportion of steppe-derived ancestry must be cautious. The archaeological label 'Steppe-influenced' suggests cultural links to populations known elsewhere to carry steppe-related ancestry, but within Nästegården the genetic signal visible in mtDNA is mixed and does not on its own demonstrate a large-scale male-mediated migration. Given the sample count is only six, these results are preliminary: wider sampling, including Y-DNA and genome-wide data, is required to resolve whether cultural change reflects movement of people, exchange of ideas, or both.