The genetic snapshot from the Cherkasy Scythian sample is small — only four genomes — so conclusions are necessarily provisional. Among these, a single Y-chromosome assignment falls into haplogroup R, a lineage widely distributed across Bronze and Iron Age Eurasia and commonly found among steppe-associated males. Maternal mitochondria are diverse across the four individuals: haplogroups A and D (typically associated with East Eurasian lineages), alongside J and N (more common in West Eurasian and Near Eastern contexts).
This mixture of maternal lineages hints at asymmetric gene flow or sex-biased mobility: it is plausible that male-mediated steppe ancestry (represented here by R) combined with female lineages from diverse geographic origins, reflecting marriage ties or incorporation of people from across Eurasia. Archaeological parallels — ornaments and material styles with eastern and western affinities — are consistent with such biological connectivity.
However, with fewer than 10 samples, the pattern may not reflect the broader population. Limited evidence suggests local Scythian groups in the Cherkasy region were genetically heterogeneous, mirroring the cosmopolitan character of Iron Age steppe societies. Future sampling across more burials and contexts is required to test models of mobility, admixture timing, and the demographic processes behind the observed maternal diversity.