Ancient DNA from 26 individuals excavated at Pruszcz Gdański offers a meaningful, though not exhaustive, genetic window into Wielbark-era populations (100–300 CE). The dataset includes several recurring Y-chromosome labels reported as CTS (3 individuals), L (3), L75 (2), M (2), and P (2). Mitochondrial lineages are dominated by European maternal haplogroup H (8), with additional U (3), K (2), V3c (2), and one labeled rCR. These patterns suggest a substantial autochthonous European maternal ancestry alongside a more heterogeneous paternal signal.
Interpretation requires caution. Some reported Y labels (e.g., L, M, P) are today more frequent in regions outside northern Europe; their presence here may reflect deep, complex ancestries, incomplete phylogenetic resolution in short panels, or rare lineages that were locally established in the Iron Age. The repeated occurrence of CTS and L75-style markers hints at lineage clustering, but finer subclade resolution is necessary to infer specific migration routes or language affiliations. With 26 samples, conclusions are stronger than single-site pilot studies but remain sensitive to sampling bias: cemeteries capture particular social groups, and unrepresented communities may have different genetic profiles.
Genetic data corroborates archaeological impressions of a porous frontier — largely European maternal continuity with a diverse set of paternal lineages that may reflect male-mediated mobility, long-distance contacts, or lineage-specific founder events. Further sequencing, expanded reference panels, and spatially broader sampling will sharpen these preliminary but evocative signals.