Along the windswept shores of Gotland—at Ajvide and Stora Karlsö—archaeological deposits record communities often grouped with the Pitted Ware tradition. Radiocarbon dates for the Sweden_PWC samples fall between c. 3100 and 2150 BCE, a span when maritime hunter‑gatherer lifeways persisted alongside expanding farming populations on the Scandinavian mainland. Archaeological data indicates specialized seal and fish exploitation, stone and bone toolkits, and characteristic pitted ceramics that give the culture its name.
Genetically, the available dataset is small (7 individuals) but informative: the male lineages are overwhelmingly haplogroup I, a marker frequently associated with long-term northern European hunter‑gatherer ancestry. Maternal lineages—dominated here by U4d, other U types, and a V—also track with northern Mesolithic and Neolithic forager groups. Limited evidence suggests these communities maintained a distinct biological profile from nearby farming groups (e.g., Funnelbeaker farmers) while also interacting with them culturally and economically.
Because the sample count is low, conclusions about population continuity, migration, and admixture remain provisional. Future sampling and broader genomic comparisons will refine whether Gotland Pitted Ware groups represent deep continuity of local forager populations, selective male-line continuity, or more complex demographic processes.