The Kura‑Araxes horizon rises from the folds of the South Caucasus mountains in the late fourth to early third millennium BCE. Archaeological data indicates a rapid florescence of a characteristic material culture—black and red burnished pottery, simple rectangular architecture, and intensive metalworking—visible at sites such as Shengavit, Kaps, Karnut Archaeological Complex, Berkaber, and Dzhoghaz Cemetery Meydanner. Radiocarbon‑anchored contexts from this dataset span 3625–2250 BCE, situating these communities firmly within the Early Bronze Age of Armenia.
Limited evidence suggests that the Kura‑Araxes phenomenon is neither a single migrating people nor a wholly local invention, but rather a horizon that combines local highland traditions with contacts across the Caucasus and into Anatolia. The archaeological record shows shared craft traditions and exchange of raw materials across valleys and mountain passes. Genetic data from 12 individuals sampled across these Armenian sites point to a largely local mitochondrial assemblage (U, H, T2h, R, K3) and a single observed Y‑chromosome type (G2b), a pattern consistent with substantial maternal continuity in the region and episodes of interaction or mobility. While this suggests deep roots in the Caucasus, uncertainties remain: 12 genomes provide a valuable but partial window, and further sampling is required to resolve the balance of continuity versus incoming admixture.