The Lech Valley communities sampled here lived along the river corridor of what is now Bavaria during the Middle Bronze Age (2193–1224 BCE). Archaeological data indicates continuity of settlement in the Oberottmarshausen and Haunstetten areas, where gravel pits and small urban fringes preserved domestic debris and funerary deposits. The landscape is painted in broad strokes by metalworking sparks and ceramic assemblages: bronze tools and ornaments appear in regional contexts, suggesting active participation in long-distance exchange across Central Europe.
Limited evidence suggests these groups maintained local traditions while also adopting material forms circulating through Bronze Age networks. Radiocarbon dates anchoring the dataset fall across the 22nd to 13th centuries BCE, a period of dynamic social reorganization elsewhere in Europe. The genetic sample (15 individuals) provides a nascent glimpse into biological ancestry but is small enough that demographic stories remain tentative. Archaeological indicators — settlement traces, burial fragments, and stray metalwork — combine with these genomes to create a portrait that is cinematic in its textures but careful in its claims.