Ancient DNA recovered from 22 individuals at Links of Noltland offers a window into maternal ancestry in Middle Bronze Age Orkney. Mitochondrial haplogroups observed include T (5 individuals), H39 (4), K (3), H (3), and U (2); the remaining samples carry other or unassigned maternal lineages. These counts indicate a diversity of maternal lines, with haplogroups common across Bronze Age Britain and Atlantic Europe.
The prevalence of T and sublineages of H suggests maternal continuity with broader British and northwestern European populations, while K and U reflect deeper Paleolithic and Neolithic maternal ancestries that persisted into the Bronze Age. The presence of H39—an H subclade observed in northern contexts—may reflect regional continuity, though subclade distributions remain incompletely understood.
Crucially, reliable Y-chromosome (paternal) signals for this assemblage are limited or inconsistently reported, so inferences about male-mediated migration or patrilineal continuity are constrained. With a sample size of 22, maternal patterns are moderately robust, but caution remains necessary: population structure, kinship within the burial sample, and preservation biases can skew frequency estimates. Future sampling and higher-coverage genome-wide data will better resolve admixture sources, affinities to mainland Scotland, Scandinavia, and earlier Neolithic inhabitants, and the balance between local continuity and incoming gene flow.