The human traces from Fleury‑sur‑Orne sit at the edge of the Atlantic façade of Neolithic Europe, dated between 4446 and 3530 BCE. Archaeological contexts in Calvados indicate small farming communities that adopted domesticated cereals, sheep and cattle while still interacting with residual forager networks in Normandy. The site’s material culture—simple pottery forms, flint toolkits and burial deposits—fits within broader Neolithic traditions of northwestern France, but local variation is clear.
Genetically, the Fleury cluster captures a moment of blending: paternal lineages include haplogroup I (found twice) which has deep Mesolithic roots in Europe, alongside haplogroups more commonly associated with farming expansions. Archaeological data indicates continuity of landscape use rather than sudden replacement. Limited evidence suggests these people lived in dispersed farmsteads rather than large nucleated villages, and their remains preserve a mixture of cultural and biological influences.
Because this dataset comprises only five genomes from a single locality, archaeological and genetic interpretations must remain cautious. The cinematic image of coastal fields and mixed diets is supported by both bones and molecules, but the picture is fragmentary: further excavation and sampling across Normandy are required to move from evocative hypothesis to confident model.