This dataset comprises 198 modern samples dated to 2000 CE from a range of communities across India and the Andaman Islands (Bengali, Birhor, Visakhapatnam, Irula, Telugu — including diaspora sampling from the United Kingdom — Jarawa, Onge, Punjabi, Rajput). The sample size is substantial enough to observe regional patterns, but interpretations must acknowledge sociocultural sampling biases and the absence of haplogroup labels in the provided metadata.
Archaeological context helps interpret genetic signals: broad South Asian genetic structure recorded in multiple studies reflects admixture between deeply diverged indigenous South Asian hunter‑gatherer ancestry (often summarized as AASI), incoming agriculturalist-related ancestries from western/central Asia (Iranian farmer-related), and later influxes linked to Steppe pastoralist-associated ancestry. Coastal and northeastern communities may show additional East/Southeast Asian affinity, while island populations like the Onge and Jarawa display distinct ancestries with long-term isolation. Because the dataset did not include explicit Y‑DNA and mtDNA haplogroup assignments, direct statements about paternal or maternal lineages cannot be made here; archaeological and comparative genetic research, however, typically reports high maternal diversity across the subcontinent and regionally variable paternal lineages.
Genetic results tied to archaeology allow narratives of migration, contact, and local persistence: shared allele patterns can echo ancient trade routes, the spread of agricultural practices, or the genetic signature of isolation in islands and forested refugia. Given the number of samples (198), population-level inferences are meaningful but should be integrated with geography, language, and documented histories for robust conclusions.