Genetic data from 16 Neolithic Sardinian individuals provide a window into the island's biological formation. Y-chromosome haplogroup counts in this sample are dominated by G (4 individuals), followed by I (3), with single occurrences of H and R. On the maternal side, mitochondrial lineages include J (3), U (3), K (3), V (1), and an R-a lineage (1).
The prominence of Y haplogroup G is consistent with patterns observed among early European farmers, who carried Anatolian-derived ancestry into the Mediterranean. Maternal lineages J and K likewise often signal Near Eastern farmer contributions. The presence of haplogroup I and U-bearing mtDNA points to a persisting hunter-gatherer substrate on the island — a genetic echo of pre-Neolithic inhabitants integrated into farming communities.
Together, the autosomal and uniparental markers suggest admixture: incoming farmer groups brought new genes and practices, while local forager ancestry remained detectable in both male and female lines. Because sample size is modest (16 individuals), some haplogroups are represented by low counts; rare lineages such as H and R appear only once and should be treated cautiously. Spatially, the sampled individuals span cave burials and necropoleis (Anghelu Ruju, Su Crucifissu Mannu, Grutta I de Longu Fresu, Sa Ucca de su Tintirriolu), allowing correlation of genetic signals with funerary contexts, but additional coastal settlements and unsampled regions may alter the pattern as more data emerge.