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Northeastern Iberia (Catalonia, Castellón)

Echoes of Iron Age Spain

A genetic and archaeological portrait of northeastern Iberia, 786–100 BCE

786 CE - 100 BCE
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Chapter I

The Story

Understanding the Echoes of Iron Age Spain culture

Archaeogenetic and archaeological evidence from 18 Spain_IA individuals (786–100 BCE) across Catalonia and Castellón reveals predominance of Y-DNA R lineages and diverse maternal haplogroups. Findings illuminate local continuity, Mediterranean contacts, and preliminary patterns of population structure.

Time Period

786–100 BCE

Region

Northeastern Iberia (Catalonia, Castellón)

Common Y-DNA

R (11 of 18 samples)

Common mtDNA

H (4), J (3), H1t (2), HV (2), H1 (1)

Chapter II

Timeline

Key moments in the history of this culture

800 BCE

Intensification of Mediterranean Contacts

Phoenician and Greek trade networks expand along the Catalan coast, introducing new goods and cultural ties that appear in archaeological deposits.

Chapter III

Origins & Emergence

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.

  • Settlements and funerary sites sampled across Catalonia and Castellón
  • Material continuity from the Late Bronze Age with increasing Mediterranean contacts
  • Genetic data hint at local paternal continuity with maternal diversity
Chapter IV

Daily Life & Society

Life in Iron Age northeastern Iberia unfolded between terraced hills, river valleys, and an expanding network of coastal harbors. Excavations at Mas d'en Boixos-1 (Pacs del Penedès), Hort d'en Grimau (Castellví de la Marca), and Mas Castellar (Pontós) reveal craft workshops, storage structures, and communal spaces that speak to agricultural intensification, viticulture, and artisanal specialization.

Archaeological assemblages provide evocative snapshots: storage amphorae and imported ceramics attest to trade; loom weights and spindle whorls tell of textile production; iron tools and weapon fragments indicate both farming and conflict. Burial contexts vary from individual interments to collective deposits, reflecting social differentiation and changing mortuary customs over the centuries sampled.

Interactions with Mediterranean traders brought new objects — exotic metals, decorated ceramics, and symbolic motifs — which appear alongside locally produced wares. These material traces suggest a society negotiating identity: rooted in long-standing Iberian practices yet receptive to external influences. Osteological data are limited but show a range of dietary signals consistent with mixed farming and coastal resources.

Because the genetic sample derives from multiple sites within this region, interpretations about kinship, mobility, and social organization are promising but preliminary. Archaeology provides the narrative stage; DNA supplies individual lines of evidence that can confirm, refine, or challenge the stories written in pottery and bone.

  • Agricultural and craft economies with evidence for trade and viticulture
  • Burial variability suggests social complexity and changing rituals
Chapter V

Genetic Profile

The Spain_IA dataset (n=18) yields a genetic portrait shaped by both continuity and contact. Eleven male individuals carry broad R-class Y-chromosome lineages — consistent with the western European dominance of R-related paternal haplogroups observed elsewhere in later prehistoric Iberia. While subclade resolution is limited in these summarized counts, archaeological context and regional patterns make R1b-related ancestries a plausible contributor, though direct assignment requires higher-resolution SNP data.

Mitochondrial diversity in this group is notable: haplogroup H appears most frequently (4 individuals) alongside J (3), H1t (2), HV (2), and H1 (1). This mix reflects maternal lineages common in western and southern Europe and suggests local continuity of female lineages combined with regional variation. Limited evidence may point to some influxes from Mediterranean source populations during the 8th–3rd centuries BCE, as trade and colonization could introduce eastern or central Mediterranean genetic inputs in small numbers; however, archaeological contacts do not always equate to large-scale gene flow.

Key caveats: the sample size is moderate and geographically clustered across several sites (Puig de la Misericordia, Puig de Sant Andreu, Mas d'en Boixos-1, Font de la Canya, Vilafamés, etc.). With n=18, population-level statements should be cautious. Future sampling, denser radiocarbon calibration, and genome-wide analysis will better resolve admixture proportions, sex-biased migration, and kinship networks hinted at by the current data.

  • Predominance of Y-DNA R (11/18) suggests paternal continuity with western Europe
  • Diverse mtDNA (H, J, HV variants) indicates multiple maternal lineages and regional heterogeneity
Chapter VI

Legacy & Modern Connections

The genetic echoes from Iron Age sites in Catalonia and Castellón contribute threads to the tapestry of modern Iberian ancestry. Archaeologically attested continuity in settlement patterns and material culture, together with the prevalence of R-class Y lineages and common western Eurasian mitochondrial types, supports a picture of long-term local ancestry shaped by episodic external contacts rather than wholesale replacement.

These findings resonate with broader studies showing that modern populations of northeastern Spain retain substantial continuity with pre-Roman inhabitants, even as Romanization and later migrations layered additional genetic inputs. However, it is essential to emphasize uncertainty: the current Spain_IA sample is moderate (n=18) and spatially concentrated, so extensions to all of Iron Age Spain or direct lines to present-day communities must be made cautiously. As more genomes from varied Iberian locales and time-slices become available, researchers will be able to chart how Iron Age demography contributed to the genomic landscape of contemporary Spain.

  • Supports long-term regional continuity with layered external influences
  • Modern Iberian genetic diversity likely includes contributions traceable to Iron Age populations, but further sampling is needed
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