The genetic snapshot from Denmark_SouthScandinavia_EBA is small — four individuals — and must be read with caution. Y-chromosome lineages in this set are dominated by haplogroup I: two samples assigned to I1 and one to general I. In northern Europe, I1 is a lineage that becomes common in later centuries and is considered characteristic of many Scandinavian male lines; its presence here suggests elements of local paternal continuity or regional ancestry components during the Early Bronze Age.
Mitochondrial diversity in the four samples includes H (two individuals), K (one), and W1 (one). Haplogroup H is the most frequent mtDNA lineage across much of Europe in the Bronze Age and later; K and W1 are also known in Neolithic and Bronze Age contexts. These maternal assignments align broadly with pan-European maternal diversity, indicating connections across northern and central Europe rather than isolated insularity.
Autosomal profiles are not summarized here individually, but in the broader region Early Bronze Age individuals commonly display substantial steppe-derived ancestry layered onto Neolithic farmer-derived and Mesolithic hunter-gatherer contributions. If these Danish samples follow the regional pattern, they likely carry a mixture of these ancestries, though with only four genomes this remains a hypothesis. In sum: the Y and mtDNA signals point to continuity with northern European lineage pools, but the low sample count (<10) makes any population-level claim preliminary. Future, larger datasets will be required to resolve sex-biased migration, kinship patterns, and fine-scale population structure.