πŸ†• Advanced Report, now with Y-DNA, mtDNA & ROH analysis Discover your paternal & maternal haplogroups, shown only when AI prediction confidence is high enough to be reliable. Plus ROH endogamy insights, ancient sample matches, all interpreted by Claude AI. Raw DNA file required for these new analyses (not available with G25 coordinates).
Discover Now
🍽️ DNA-Based Nutrition Report: Discover Which Foods Fuel Your Body Upload your 23andMe, AncestryDNA or MyHeritage file and discover exactly which foods fuel your body, based on your personal genetic blueprint.
Try our Free Test

Study Information

2026
Central Europe

Abstract

The Late Bronze Age (ca. 1300–800 BCE) of Central Europe is often characterised as a period of increasing mobility, socioeconomic transformation, environmental fluctuations, and expanding cultural networks. However, reconstructing the demographic aspects of these changes has been hindered by cremation being the dominant mortuary practice, limiting biomolecular approaches. Here, we integrate ancient DNA, oxygen and strontium isotope analyses, and osteoarchaeology to examine rare inhumation burials from Kuckenburg and Esperstedt in Central Germany (n = 36) and compare them to contemporaneous inhumations from the neighbouring regions of South Germany, Bohemia (Czechia) and Southwest/Central Poland (n = 33). Genome-wide data show genetic continuity with preceding Early Bronze Age populations, alongside gradual increases in Early European Farmer-related ancestry, albeit with regionally different timing and extent, reflecting a nuanced pattern of mobility and admixture. Oxygen and strontium isotope data from Central Germany indicate that most individuals match the local isotope signal, including those who were cremated or had a different diet, and with only a few isotopic outliers, suggesting that mobility was present but not extensive. Overall, our findings suggest that the diverse inhumation practices at Kuckenburg and Esperstedt were culturally motivated, reflecting local traditions and ongoing regional interconnectedness rather than the influx of new genetic groups or non-local individuals.

We use cookies to enhance your experience. By continuing to visit this site you agree to our use of cookies. Learn more