The genetic evidence currently attributed to the Azerbaijan_Shamakhi_Antiquity cultural label is extremely limited: one ancient individual dated between 205 and 346 CE. That single genome carries Y-chromosome haplogroup J and mitochondrial haplogroup K. Haplogroup J is widespread today across the Near East and Caucasus and has been recurrently observed in ancient samples from West Asia and the Levant — a signal compatible with regional continuity or gene flow from southern neighbors. mtDNA K has deep associations with Neolithic and later West Eurasian maternal lineages, appearing across Europe and West Asia.
With a sample count of one, any population-level claims are preliminary. The observed J/K pairing illustrates possible admixture between local Caucasian groups and broader Near Eastern ancestries, but it cannot resolve the timing, direction, or demographic magnitude of such interactions. Preservation biases, burial selection, and kin-based sampling (for example, a single cemetery family) can skew interpretations. Future, larger aDNA series from Shamakhi and neighboring sites are essential to test models of continuity, migration, and social structure. For now, genetics offers a tantalizing, individual-level window that complements — rather than replaces — the archaeological narrative.