Genetic data from eight individuals associated with Salapia and Herdonia offers a tantalizing but preliminary glimpse of maternal ancestry in Daunian contexts. Mitochondrial haplogroups in this small dataset are dominated by U (3 individuals), K (2), and H lineages (H, H5c, H1e; 3 individuals total). In broad strokes, haplogroup U is often associated with deep European hunter-gatherer and early farmer lineages, K is frequently linked to European Neolithic farmer expansions, and H is widespread across Europe from the later Neolithic onward. These patterns suggest maternal ancestry in Daunian sites reflects a long-standing mixture of upstream European lineages and Neolithic farmer-derived lineages.
Crucially, Y‑chromosome (paternal) haplogroups are not reported or are insufficient in this dataset, so inferences about male-mediated migration or steppe-associated male lineages cannot be made here. Because the sample count is low (n=8), statements about population-wide frequencies or demographic events must be cautious: limited evidence suggests maternal continuity with regional Neolithic and Bronze Age populations, but broader conclusions require larger, better-contextualized samples.
When combined with archaeological context—trade, coastal connectivity, and cultural exchange—these genetic signals emphasize a picture of regional continuity punctuated by external contacts. Future targeted sampling and genome-wide data will help resolve questions of admixture, mobility, and kinship structure.