The genomic series from East Yorkshire (n = 32) offers a regional snapshot of Late Iron Age ancestry. Y-chromosome results are dominated by haplogroup R in 15 male individuals — a category that in northwest Europe is commonly represented by R1b sublineages associated with Bronze Age expansions. This pattern is consistent with a long-standing male lineage continuity established centuries earlier, although the present data do not resolve detailed R subclades.
Mitochondrial haplogroups are led by H (16 individuals), with smaller counts of K (4), U (4), J (3) and T (1). The prominence of H matches a broad pattern of maternal continuity in Britain from the Neolithic and Bronze Age into the Iron Age, while K, U and J reflect maternal lineages found across Atlantic and Continental Europe. Together these results suggest a population shaped by a Bronze Age-derived backbone, ongoing local continuity, and measurable maternal diversity potentially reflecting coastal connectivity.
Caveats: sample size (32) is moderate for population-level inference — conclusions about fine-scale structure or sex-biased migration should be tentative. Y-haplogroup labels here are broad (R), and more precise subtyping would strengthen interpretations about paternal ancestry and migration timing. Archaeogenetic evidence should be read alongside burial context and material culture: high-status graves do not neatly map onto single lineages in this dataset, indicating social complexity in which ancestry, identity and status intersect.