Beneath the wind-scoured plateau of Çorum Province, the Late Chalcolithic layers at Çamlıbel Tarlası (dated 3651–3376 BCE) hold skeletons that bridge the Neolithic agricultural revolution and later Bronze Age transformations. Archaeological data indicates occupation during a period when communities in central Anatolia intensified farming, crafted fine ceramics, and negotiated long-distance exchange networks. Material remains from nearby Late Chalcolithic sites suggest settlement continuity in the region, though large-scale urbanism had not yet appeared.
The genetic signal from the Çamlıbel Tarlası individuals aligns with this archaeological picture: maternal lineages dominated by mtDNA K and paternal lineages with a notable presence of haplogroup G point to ancestry related to Anatolian and Near Eastern farming populations rather than purely steppe-derived groups. Limited stratigraphic resolution and the moderate sample size mean interpretations must remain cautious; however, the combined archaeological and genetic evidence paints a scene of rooted farming households, local social networks, and selective interaction with neighbouring regions.