Sixteen genomes from Montenegro_MLBA (Velika Gruda) provide a maternal portrait of these Bronze Age people. mtDNA haplogroups are dominated by H (6 individuals) and U (5), with single occurrences of K2a, J, and W+; two individuals lack reported maternal calls or remain unassigned in the dataset. These haplogroups are common across prehistoric Europe—H and U, in particular, are frequent among Neolithic farmer-descended and later Bronze Age populations—so their presence aligns Montenegro_MLBA with broad continental maternal patterns.
Y-chromosome data are not clearly represented in the provided summary, and therefore paternal affinities remain unresolved for this cohort; any interpretation of male-mediated migrations or kinship must remain tentative. Where broader Balkan Bronze Age studies exist, patterns often show continuity of Neolithic-derived maternal lineages together with influxes of steppe-associated ancestry on the male side. The Montenegro_MLBA mtDNA distribution is consistent with that regional trend, but direct evidence for steppe-related admixture or specific paternal haplogroups at Velika Gruda cannot be established from the current sample summary.
With 16 samples, conclusions are stronger than from very small series but still limited: population substructure, kin networks within the cemetery, and fine-scale migration events require larger sample sizes and genome-wide analyses to resolve. Archaeogenetics here provides a powerful bridge to the archaeological record, illuminating maternal lineages while pointing to gaps—especially in Y-DNA—where future sampling can sharpen the picture.