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Albania_LN_C Southeast Albania (Devoll valley)

Tren Cave Ancestors (Albania)

Two Late Neolithic–Chalcolithic individuals from Tren Cave illuminate maternal lineages in SE Albania

5000 CE - 3500 BCE
2 Ancient Samples
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Chapter I

The Story

Understanding the Tren Cave Ancestors (Albania) culture

Genetic and archaeological evidence from two individuals (Tren Cave, Devoll) dating 5000–3500 BCE offers a preliminary glimpse into Late Neolithic–Chalcolithic communities in Albania. Maternal haplogroups HV4 and J1c appear; Y-chromosome data are not reported. Interpretations remain tentative.

Time Period

5000–3500 BCE (Late Neolithic–Chalcolithic)

Region

Southeast Albania (Devoll valley)

Common Y-DNA

Undetermined / not reported

Common mtDNA

HV4 (1), J1c (1)

Chapter II

Timeline

Key moments in the history of this culture

2500 BCE

Tren Cave occupation (approximate)

Midpoint within the Tren Cave date range; reflects active Late Neolithic–Chalcolithic occupation in the Devoll valley (preliminary context).

Chapter III

Origins & Emergence

Tren Cave, perched in the Devoll valley of southeast Albania, preserves deposits attributed to the Late Neolithic through Chalcolithic (c. 5000–3500 BCE). Archaeological data indicates stratified occupation layers consistent with small, locally rooted communities. Limited excavation and survey in the wider Devoll landscape reveal pottery styles and chipped-stone technologies that echo broader Balkan Neolithic traditions, suggesting cultural connections across the interior Adriatic corridor.

The two genetic samples associated with the label Albania_LN_C derive from this regional context. Their chronology spans a dynamic interval when long-established Neolithic farming lifeways persisted even as new influences began to circulate across the Balkans. Limited evidence suggests continuity of local settlement patterns rather than abrupt population replacement during this window, but uncertainties remain: the Tren Cave dataset is small, and material culture alone cannot resolve complex demographic processes.

Taken together, the archaeological footprint of Tren Cave evokes a landscape of enduring settlements, weaving local traditions into wider Neolithic networks of exchange and shared practice.

  • Site: Tren Cave, Devoll valley, Southeast Albania
  • Date range: ca. 5000–3500 BCE (Late Neolithic–Chalcolithic)
  • Archaeological indicators point to local Neolithic traditions with regional connections
Chapter IV

Daily Life & Society

Archaeological parallels from the central and southern Balkans suggest that inhabitants of the Tren Cave hinterland practiced mixed farming: cultivation of cereals and pulses alongside managed herds of cattle, sheep and goats. Material remains typical of Late Neolithic contexts—pottery, ground stone tools, and worked bone—signal domestic economies oriented around seasonal cycles and household production.

Socially, small village clusters and cave-associated activity areas likely structured daily life. Exchange of raw materials and finished goods across river valleys and toward the Adriatic coast is archaeologically plausible, indicating networks that moved not only objects but ideas and possibly people. Funerary behavior in the region ranges from primary inhumation to secondary deposition; Tren Cave’s human remains contribute to this mosaic, yet the small sample size precludes confident reconstruction of social hierarchy or burial rites specific to the site.

Environmental reconstruction suggests a mixed woodland and open-field landscape, where communities balanced foraging, husbandry, and crop cultivation. Craft specializations—pottery making, bone working—would have provided focal points for skill transmission across generations.

  • Mixed farming economy with domesticated plants and animals
  • Local craft production and regional exchange networks likely
Chapter V

Genetic Profile

The Albania_LN_C dataset comprises two individuals from Tren Cave, each preserving mitochondrial haplogroups: HV4 (1) and J1c (1). Mitochondrial lineages such as J1c have broad associations with early European farmer populations derived largely from Anatolian Neolithic ancestry; HV4 is a West Eurasian maternal clade found at low frequencies across Europe and the Near East and may reflect local or regionally widespread maternal ancestries.

Crucially, no Y-chromosome haplogroups are reported for these two samples, and the total sample count is only two—well below thresholds for population-level inference. Consequently, any demographic conclusions must be framed as provisional. Within the wider ancient DNA record, Neolithic Balkan farmers typically carry predominantly Anatolian-derived ancestry with limited hunter-gatherer admixture prior to the later Chalcolithic and Bronze Age. The Tren Cave maternal signatures are therefore consistent with a Neolithic-derived maternal heritage, but the small N prevents detection of finer-scale admixture or incoming steppe-related signals that began to reshape the Balkans after c. 3500–3000 BCE.

In sum, the genetic data from Tren Cave offer evocative but tentative glimpses of maternal ancestry in southeastern Albania; larger sample sizes and Y-chromosome data would be needed to clarify male lineages and population dynamics.

  • mtDNA haplogroups: HV4 and J1c (each observed once)
  • Sample count is small (n=2); conclusions are preliminary
Chapter VI

Legacy & Modern Connections

These two Tren Cave genomes form a slender but meaningful thread linking deep Neolithic lifeways to the later tapestry of the Balkans. Maternal haplogroups like J1c and HV4 persist at low frequencies in modern West Eurasian populations, suggesting fragments of continuity in maternal lines across millennia. However, genetic continuity in the Balkans is complex: later migrations and admixture events—especially during the late Chalcolithic and Bronze Age—reshaped the genetic landscape.

Archaeologically, Tren Cave contributes to a regional story of long-term settlement and cultural exchange in the Devoll valley. For contemporary communities in Albania, the site is a tangible link to prehistoric ancestors who cultivated the land, crafted ceramics, and navigated networks of exchange. Scientific prudence demands that we treat the present genetic snapshot as a starting point: expanded sampling, contextual excavation, and interdisciplinary study will be needed to illuminate how these early communities contributed to the genetic ancestry of later Balkan populations.

  • Maternal lineages show potential fragments of continuity with modern West Eurasian pools
  • Future research and larger samples are required to map long-term genetic change
Chapter VII

Sample Catalog

2 ancient DNA samples associated with the Tren Cave Ancestors (Albania) culture

Ancient DNA samples from this era, providing genetic insights into the people who lived during this period.

2 / 2 samples
Portrait Sample Country Era Date Culture Sex Y-DNA mtDNA
Portrait of ancient individual I13838 from Albania, dated 5000 BCE
I13838
Albania Albania_LN_C 5000 BCE Old European M - HV4
Portrait of ancient individual I13840 from Albania, dated 4313 BCE
I13840
Albania Albania_LN_C 4313 BCE Old European M - J1c
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