Seventy individuals from Lech valley contexts provide a substantive genetic snapshot for the Early Bronze Age in southern Germany. Y-chromosome results show a pronounced preponderance of haplogroup R (25 of 70 males), with smaller counts of BT (3), F (1), I (1) and P (1). This dominance of R aligns with broader Bronze Age patterns in Central Europe where steppe‑derived paternal lineages expanded, consistent with archaeological evidence for mobile, male-mediated networks. However, without fine-grained subclade resolution for most samples, interpretations about precise migration routes remain tentative.
Mitochondrial DNA paints a complementary picture: maternal lineages are diverse, dominated by haplogroups K (14), H (12) and U (10), with J (5) and X (4) also present. These mtDNA types are commonly associated with both Neolithic farmer-derived populations and later Bronze Age communities across Europe, suggesting substantial maternal continuity alongside incoming male-biased ancestry. The combination — a high proportion of Y-R with a mixed suite of mtDNA lineages — is consistent with scenarios of male-driven gene flow interacting with established local female lineages.
With 70 samples, these patterns are robust for the Lech valley but regionally localized. Archaeogenetic data indicates both continuity and admixture; finer-scale sampling and subclade resolution would further clarify the timing and sources of gene flow.