Ancient DNA results from five individuals at Shekshovo-9 provide early genetic glimpses into this medieval community. Y-chromosome results include two individuals assigned to haplogroup R and one to haplogroup I; mitochondrial haplogroups are not consistently reported across the dataset. These Y-lineages are common in Eastern and Northern Europe today and in many medieval-period samples across the region, but without fine-grained subclade resolution we must avoid over-interpretation.
With only five samples, statistical power is minimal. Limited evidence suggests the male lineages at Shekshovo-9 fit within the broad genetic landscape of medieval Eastern Europe, consistent with archaeological indications of local continuity. However, the small sample count (<10) means patterns may reflect family-level kinship or chance survival rather than population-wide signatures.
Genetic and archaeological datasets together hint at continuity between local medieval populations and later regional gene pools, but confirmatory data are required. Future sampling — more burials, better mtDNA resolution, and autosomal analyses — will be necessary to test hypotheses about ancestry, mobility, and social structure at Shekshovo-9.