The genetic dataset of 52 individuals from Curătești, Căscioarele, Sultana Valea, Gordinești I, Petko Karavelovo, Varna, and Yunatsite provides a window into maternal and paternal diversity in the Chalcolithic lower Danube corridor. Mitochondrial haplogroups are dominated by H (10), K (9), and U (7), which is consistent with broad Neolithic farmer-related maternal ancestry in Europe combined with some persistence of hunter-gatherer–associated lineages (U). This maternal pattern aligns with archaeological indications of farming continuity.
On the paternal side, the apparent predominance of haplogroups labeled here as L (8) and V88 (5) is unexpected for Chalcolithic southeastern Europe and merits cautious interpretation. Low counts for several Y-chromosome lineages (PF: 3, M: 2, FGC: 2) mean conclusions about their population-wide importance are preliminary. Limited evidence suggests these rarer paternal signatures could reflect small-scale male-line contacts across the Mediterranean or Black Sea, survival of rare local lineages, or sampling variance; they do not necessarily indicate broad migrations.
Autosomal profiles from regional Chalcolithic contexts elsewhere typically show dominant Anatolian farmer ancestry with variable indigenous hunter-gatherer admixture and little steppe-related ancestry before ~3000 BCE. In this dataset, the overall pattern is compatible with farmer-derived genetic continuity, punctuated by low-frequency paternal diversity that requires more samples and higher-resolution analysis to interpret robustly.