Genomic data from eight individuals (sampled 778–171 BCE) provide a rare molecular window into Western Scythian communities. Because the sample count is small (<10), all genetic conclusions must be treated as preliminary. Y-chromosome results show a predominance of haplogroup R (3 individuals), with single occurrences of J and Q. These Y-lineages are consistent with a strong steppe-derived male component (R is widespread on the Eurasian steppe), alongside signals that may reflect regional contacts—J often appears in contexts with Near Eastern connections, and Q can indicate wider Eurasian links.
Mitochondrial diversity is higher than paternal diversity in this set: H appears twice, with single instances of W, T2b, J and X4. Such maternal variety suggests female-mediated gene flow and exogamy, where women from diverse backgrounds joined local communities. Archaeological contexts (mound burials, hillfort pits) align with this genetic picture of mobility and interconnection.
Genome-wide ancestry (where data permit) commonly shows a mix of steppe-associated ancestry with varying proportions of local European Neolithic-related components in contemporaneous Scythian groups elsewhere; however, we lack broad autosomal comparisons for all eight Ukrainian individuals here. In short, the genetic snapshot points to steppe-rooted male lineages combined with diverse maternal inputs—consistent with a mobile, networked Iron Age society—but larger sample sets are needed to confirm population-level patterns.