Carved into the windswept promontories of East Lothian, the communities represented at Broxmouth and Law Road belong to the tapestry of Middle to Late Iron Age Scotland (c. 4th–1st centuries BCE). Archaeological data indicates these places were hubs of fortified settlement and coastal interaction. Excavations at Broxmouth reveal substantial earthworks and domestic layers consistent with long-term occupation and defense; nearby North Berwick (Law Road) sits within a landscape of ridge-top sites and agricultural terraces that shaped local lifeways.
Genetically, the small assemblage (seven genomes) sits comfortably within broader western European Iron Age variation: five individuals carry Y-lineages reported as R, while a majority of mitochondrial genomes belong to haplogroup H. Limited evidence suggests maternal continuity in the region, while paternal lineages reflect the widespread presence of R-type lineages across Atlantic Britain. However, with only seven samples drawn from two close localities, conclusions about population origins and migration processes remain provisional.
Culturally, these communities fall into a contested historical picture: later sources reference groups such as the Picts in eastern Scotland, but direct one-to-one links between those ethnonyms and the archaeological record are debated. What is clear is a regionally rooted population engaged in coastal exchange networks and craft production, forming the local substratum later historical narratives would encounter.