The Samantaş series comprises seven sampled individuals dated to 491–717 CE. Mitochondrial DNA (maternal lineages) is reported for six individuals: K (2), K1a (1), N (1), U (1), and W6 (1); one individual lacked a confident mtDNA assignment or data. No clear, consistent Y-chromosome signal was reported across the set, so paternal lineage inference is limited.
mtDNA haplogroup K (including K1a) is common across Europe and western Asia and can reflect deep ancestry tied to Neolithic and later populations in Anatolia and the Aegean. Haplogroups N, U, and W6 likewise have broad geographies across Eurasia, often appearing in both ancient and modern populations of Europe and Anatolia. Taken together, the maternal profile at Samantaş is consistent with a population carrying lineages typical of Anatolian and eastern Mediterranean gene pools. Archaeogenetic studies elsewhere in Anatolia often reveal continuity with Neolithic farmer-derived ancestry combined with admixture from later movements; the Samantaş mtDNA fits within this broader pattern without forcing a specific migration narrative.
Caveats are critical: with fewer than ten genomes, statistical power is low. Any claims about population continuity, admixture proportions, or migrations remain tentative. Future sampling — particularly of Y-DNA and genome-wide data — is necessary to refine paternal history and to place Samantaş more precisely within regional genetic transitions.