Ancient DNA from seven individuals (samples dated between ca. 4352 and 1830 BCE) provides a preliminary genetic portrait of these comb‑pit communities. Y‑chromosome haplogroups include R (observed twice) and Q (observed once). Haplogroup R lineages are widespread across West Eurasia and the Eurasian steppe, while Q is often associated with northern and eastern Eurasian populations; their co‑occurrence suggests male‑line contributions from both western and eastern ancestries.
Mitochondrial diversity is notable: U lineages (including U4a) occur twice, C lineages (including C5c) twice, and D4j once. Haplogroups U, C, and D are commonly found in northern Eurasian, Siberian, and some Mesolithic European contexts. This mix indicates maternal ancestries anchored in northern Eurasia with links to both ancient Siberian hunter‑gatherers and populations carrying West Eurasian maternal lineages.
Taken together, the aDNA suggests a biogeographical frontier where West Eurasian‑associated Y lineages and northern Eurasian maternal lineages meet. However, with only seven genomes, any demographic model is highly provisional. Limited evidence suggests admixture and regional continuity, but more samples are required to resolve timing, sex‑biased gene flow, and population dynamics across the 3,000‑year span represented here.