The genetic portrait assembled from 441 ancient genomes offers a richly detailed but careful narrative. Y‑chromosome markers in this dataset are led by haplogroup J (42 counts), followed by T (17), R (14), G (12) and E (8). Maternal lineages are diverse, with mtDNA U (53), K (44), H (44), T (37) and J (31) among the most frequent. These patterns reflect a long history of regional continuity with punctual influxes of new ancestries.
Haplogroup J is commonly associated with long‑standing Near Eastern male lineages and appears across sites from the Zagros to the Caucasus. The presence of R lineages—often linked in broader West Eurasia to steppe‑related ancestries—points to intermittent male‑biased inputs, though in most contexts such inputs are modest rather than dominant. Haplogroups G, T and E add further evidence of North Mesopotamian, Anatolian and Iranian connections.
Mitochondrial diversity—high frequencies of U, K, H, T and J—suggests broad maternal continuity and integration of local hunter‑gatherer and farmer ancestral components. Regional structure is visible: individuals from the South Caucasus and eastern Anatolia show elevated Caucasus‑related genetic signatures, while Zagros samples retain stronger Zagros/Iranian farmer ancestry. Because sample coverage varies by site and period, fine‑scale demographic models remain provisional; however, the sample size allows robust detection of recurrent admixture pulses and long‑term persistence of core Near Eastern ancestries.