Along the turbulent gorge of the Danube known as the Iron Gates, small, mobile communities settled riverbanks and terraces from the early Mesolithic onward. Archaeological data from sites such as Lepenski Vir, Vlasac, Padina and Hajduka Vodenica record long stratified sequences of hearths, burials and fish‑processing floors dating between 9755 and 5710 BCE. The material record—stone tools, carved stone idols, and structured houses at Lepenski Vir—paints a picture of adaptive lifeways centered on the river.
Genetically, 42 sampled individuals from these sites provide a rare and comparatively dense Mesolithic dataset. The predominance of mitochondrial haplogroup U aligns with broader European hunter‑gatherer signatures, suggesting deep maternal continuity in the region. Y‑chromosome haplogroups I and R appear among males, consistent with local European hunter‑gatherer lineages and occasional links to neighboring groups. Limited evidence suggests episodes of contact or gene flow across the Danube corridor, but the primary signal is one of long‑term, place‑rooted subsistence populations. As always, archaeological and genetic interpretations must remain cautious: preservation bias, temporal gaps, and uneven sampling can affect apparent patterns.