The genetic dataset for Italy_Sardinia_C comprises eight individuals dated between 3371 and 2140 BCE. Y-chromosome assignments include G (2), H (1), I (1), R (1), and E (1); mitochondrial lineages include K (2), T (1), H1k (1), H (1), and H1 (1). These markers sketch a mosaic: mtDNA types K and H are common among European Neolithic farmers, consistent with archaeological evidence for continuity of early farming ancestry on Sardinia.
The presence of a single R Y-haplogroup could reflect an incursion of lineages more commonly associated elsewhere in Bronze Age Europe, but a single R carrier among six assigned Y profiles (and eight total samples) is insufficient to claim broad population change. Likewise, G and I Y-lineages are often associated with long-standing European farming and hunter-fisher-forager substrata; E and H suggest Mediterranean connections and the persistence of diverse paternal lines.
Because fewer than ten genomes inform these patterns, all interpretations must be treated as preliminary. The genetic picture aligns with modest continuity from earlier Sardinian Neolithic ancestry alongside punctuated inputs of diverse paternal lineages. Further sampling across time and space on the island will be essential to test hypotheses about migration, sex-biased gene flow, and the relationship between genetics and the archaeological record.