Daily life in these communities — whether in Mosul’s riverine neighborhoods, the mountain town of Amadiya, or the Kurdish plains around Erbil — is layered with ancient practices and modern adaptations. Material culture visible in homes and markets includes handcrafted textiles, ceramic traditions, built stone architecture in older quarters, and agricultural practices tied to local microclimates. Archaeology of contemporary urban neighborhoods often records renovations, reuse of ancient stones, and accumulation of modern debris that, when carefully interpreted, traces continuity in craft, cuisine and settlement patterns.
Socially, northern Iraq is plural: Kurdish, Arab, Assyrian, Yazidi, Turkmen, and Mandean traditions coexist and interweave through language, religion, and kinship. The samples here were collected from people with diverse self-identities and migration histories; migrants sampled in Israel point to recent diasporic ties and transnational family networks. Ethnographic observation and built-environment archaeology indicate resilient local practices alongside rapid social change since the mid-20th century. These human stories provide crucial context for interpreting genetic data: living practices, marriage networks and mobility patterns all shape the biological signals we observe.