Under the long sweep of the Hindu Kush foothills, Butkara II in the Swat Valley emerges in the archaeological record as an Iron Age locus of ritual and communal life between roughly 1000 and 785 BCE. Excavations and survey work in the Butkara area reveal stratified deposits and localized concentrations of ritual architecture that signal an enduring cultural presence. Archaeological data indicates continuity of place: the valley’s deep river slots and fertile terraces supported farming communities while also anchoring pilgrimage and ritual locales.
Genetic data from five sampled individuals provides a tentative glimpse of the people who used these spaces. The predominance of Y-chromosome R lineages among the small set of male individuals is consistent with wider patterns of West Eurasian-associated ancestry in parts of northern South Asia during the first millennium BCE, while the presence of J hints at Near Eastern connections. Maternal lineages are mixed (U, HV alongside M and W), suggesting complex local and regional networks of descent and mobility. Limited evidence suggests these genetic signatures reflect both local continuity and incoming influences; however, with only five genomes the picture remains preliminary and subject to revision as more samples and direct archaeological associations become available.