Ancient DNA from 14 individuals recovered at Sappali Tepe provides a window into the biological ancestry of this Bronze Age community. The Y-chromosome pool is heterogeneous: two individuals carry haplogroup R (a lineage common in steppe groups), two carry J (often associated with Near Eastern and South Asian connections), and single occurrences of G, Q and L point to additional, more diverse ancestries — Q can reflect northern or eastern inputs, while L is more frequently observed in South and Southwest Asian contexts.
On the maternal side, haplogroups U (4 individuals) and W (2) dominate, with HV and J1b also present. Haplogroup U is widespread across Eurasia and can indicate deep regional continuity; W and HV are less common but attested in West and Central Asian Bronze Age populations. Together the Y and mtDNA patterns suggest admixture between steppe-related males and a broader set of maternal lineages, or alternatively multiple waves of incoming males from different source regions.
These interpretations are scientifically cautious: with n=14, this is a moderate dataset that reveals diversity but cannot fully resolve population history or demographic processes. Genome-wide autosomal data would better estimate admixture proportions and directionality; existing haplogroup counts are a first, evocative map of biological connections.