Three ancient genomes from Guernsey (Vale, Le Déhus) dated between 3088 and 2301 BCE provide a preliminary genetic window into Late Neolithic islanders. The Y-chromosome lineages observed—one I2 and one I—are often associated in western Europe with Mesolithic hunter-gatherer ancestry and, in some regions, with later local continuity rather than incoming Steppe-related male expansions. The mitochondrial haplogroups—K, K1 and J—are frequently found among early European farmers and suggest maternal ancestry tied to Neolithic agricultural populations.
Combining archaeology and genetics suggests an island population with a mix of ancestries: maternal signals pointing to Neolithic farmer ancestry, alongside paternal lineages that may reflect local persistence of hunter-derived lineages or complex admixture. Crucially, sample count is very small (n=3). With fewer than ten samples, any population-level inference is provisional: these genomes hint at patterns but cannot define diversity across the islands or through time. Future sampling is necessary to test whether observed haplogroups represent broader continuity, recent migrations, or kin-specific burial practices. For now, genetic and archaeological evidence together weave a cautious story of interaction—maritime connectivity bringing farmer maternal lineages into an island matrix shaped by local male lineages and island ecology.