The genomic snapshot from Pla de l'Horta comprises eight individuals dated to the Visigothic period (500–700 CE). Uniparental markers show a mosaic pattern: Y-DNA haplogroups E (2 individuals) and J (1) suggest Mediterranean connections often linked to North Africa and the eastern Mediterranean, while R (1) and I (1) reflect lineages widespread in western and northern Europe. Mitochondrial haplogroups include U (2) and H (1), common in Europe, alongside C (2), W6a (1), and J (1), indicating greater maternal diversity than might be expected solely from local lineages.
Important caveats apply. Uniparental markers trace only single ancestral lines and can overemphasize particular migrations. The presence of mtDNA C, typically rare in Europe, could reflect long-distance contacts, earlier prehistoric movement, or stochastic survival of rare lineages; archaeological context does not yet clarify its origin. With only eight sampled individuals, patterns of frequency can be heavily influenced by chance. Genome-wide data and larger sample sizes will be necessary to resolve whether these haplogroup signals reflect small-scale mobility, elite migration, or long-term local admixture.
Despite limitations, the genetic data align with an archaeological narrative of a region connected to Mediterranean and European networks — a crossroads where bloodlines, goods, and cultural practices mixed.