The Austria_N_LBK dataset comprises 89 ancient individuals from sites including Asparn-Schletz (Niederösterreich, Mistelbach) and Brunn Wolfholz. This sample size allows more robust inferences than many early aDNA studies: genetic data indicate a dominant Anatolian-farmer autosomal ancestry with measurable admixture from Western Hunter-Gatherer (WHG) lineages in varying proportions across individuals.
Paternal haplogroups are notable for an unexpectedly high count of haplogroup C (26 individuals), alongside G (14), J (5), H (5), and single BT. Haplogroup G is commonly associated with Neolithic farmers in Europe, while the prominence of C and presence of J and H underscore regional complexity in male lineages. These patterns demand careful interpretation: they may reflect localized founder effects, post-migration male-mediated gene flow, or sampling biases tied to particular burial contexts. Maternal lineages show a diversity typical of Neolithic Europe: mtDNA haplogroups H (13), K (10), J (10), T2b (9), and T (7), consistent with maternal ancestry derived largely from early farming groups but including lineages that later became widespread in Europe.
Archaeogenetic models for Austria_N_LBK support a scenario of incoming farming populations carrying Anatolian-derived genomes, subsequently admixing with local foragers. Given the relatively large sample size, these conclusions are stronger than for many early-era datasets, but regional heterogeneity and chronological changes across the 1000-year span (5500–4500 BCE) mean some sub-patterns remain provisional. Where sample counts in sub-sites are small, interpretations should be treated as preliminary.