The year 2000 CE sits within a long, layered landscape of human presence on the Eastern Baltic. Archaeological data indicates dense settlement continuity in urban centers such as Tallinn and Pärnu and persistent rural lifeways in areas like Viljandi and Avinurme. The material record for the modern era often shifts from traditional excavation finds to documentary archives, built heritage, and anthropological collections; nevertheless, salvage archaeology and cemetery studies still recover human remains and objects that can be linked to named places and families.
This dataset comprises ten individuals sampled from four locations: Pärnu, Avinurme, Viljandi and Tallinn (all Estonia). Those samples provide a focused, contemporary snapshot rather than a deep-time origin story. Limited evidence suggests that the genetic composition of people in Estonia at the turn of the 21st century reflects millennia of regional processes: Finno-Ugric roots, Baltic interactions, medieval Hanseatic connections, and later Russian and Scandinavian contacts. Archaeological continuity — houses, parish records, manorial landscapes — and modern mobility together shape the context in which these individuals lived.
Caveat: with only ten samples, interpretations about population-wide origins remain preliminary; they are best read alongside larger regional genetic studies and rich historical archives.