The early Neolithic horizon at Ifri n'Amr or Moussa (dated by samples to roughly 5367–4805 BCE) sits at a cultural threshold in northwest Africa. Archaeological data indicates a gradual transition from Epipalaeolithic lifeways toward practices associated with the Neolithic — new ceramics, altered settlement patterns, and incipient food production — but the pace and source of these changes remain debated. The limited genetic dataset from four individuals suggests continuity with long-established North African maternal lineages (mtDNA U) alongside a low-frequency mtDNA M and a single observed Y-haplogroup E lineage.
Limited evidence suggests that some elements of material culture may derive from local adaptation of mobile forager groups, rather than a wholesale population replacement. At the same time, subtle genetic signals leave open the possibility of small-scale gene flow from the eastern Mediterranean or Sahara corridors. Given the small sample size, these interpretations are provisional: further excavations and additional genomes will be required to refine models of demographic change during the Epipalaeolithic–Neolithic transition in the Maghreb.