The Spain_IA assemblage sits on a long palimpsest of Iberian prehistory. Archaeological layers at sites such as Puig de la Misericordia (Vinaròs), Puig de Sant Andreu (Ullastret) and Font de la Canya (Avinyonet del Penedés) preserve Iron Age settlement plans, funerary practices, and material exchanges dated between 786 and 100 BCE. These landscapes bear the imprint of local Late Bronze Age traditions — continuity visible in ceramic styles and settlement locations — overlaid by new impulses from the western Mediterranean.
Archaeological data indicates intensified maritime contact from the 8th century BCE: Phoenician and Greek trade networks reached the Catalan coast, while later Carthaginian and Roman interactions reshaped politics and economy. Limited evidence suggests some changes in mortuary display and imported goods correspond with this contact. The genetic record from 18 individuals provides a window into how those cultural tides may have intersected with population dynamics: a predominance of Y-DNA R lineages suggests continuation of western European paternal ancestry, while mitochondrial diversity points to more varied maternal lineages.
Caveats are important: the sample is geographically focused and moderate in size. Archaeogenetic conclusions therefore remain provisional, best read alongside stratigraphy, radiocarbon dates, and artefact provenience rather than as definitive population histories.