The genetic snapshot from 19 individuals paints a Mediterranean mosaic shaped by local continuity and long-distance connections. Y-DNA haplogroups observed among typed males include R (4), J (3), and single occurrences of E, L, and T. These patterns suggest a predominance of typically West Eurasian lineages (R), substantial Near Eastern/Mediterranean links (J), and occasional lineages that may reflect broader Afro-Eurasian interactions (E, L, T). It is important to note that only a subset of the 19 individuals yielded Y-chromosome calls, and the counts above reflect typed males rather than the full sample.
Mitochondrial DNA (maternal lineages) shows H (4), K (4), T (3), U (3), and HV (2) among the samples — a distribution consistent with common European and Mediterranean maternal ancestries. These mtDNA haplogroups align with archaeological expectations for coastal and inland Iberian populations, reflecting both deep local roots and connectivity with Mediterranean gene pools.
Archaeogenetic interpretation must emphasize caution: the sample set is regionally focused and modest in size. While 19 individuals provide valuable, direct glimpses into population composition, broader claims about all of Roman Hispania require larger, geographically diverse datasets. Nevertheless, the combined presence of R and J haplogroups, plus sporadic E and L, supports historical models of Roman-era mobility, recruitment of soldiers from diverse provinces, and maritime trade that brought people and genes into Iberia.