The Knowe of Skea individuals date between 340 BCE and 250 CE, placing them in the later Iron Age landscape of Orkney. Archaeological data indicates persistent island settlement through the Bronze and Iron Ages, with maritime lifeways focused on fishing, inter-island contact, and coastal resources. Knowe of Skea (Westray) sits within a tapestry of broch towers, settlement mounds, cairns and field systems that mark Orkney’s deep prehistory.
Genetically, the three sampled individuals provide glimpses of maternal ancestry: two carry H1b and one carries a U lineage. Haplogroup H1 subclades are widespread across Atlantic Europe in the later prehistoric and historic periods, while mtDNA U is an older European lineage tied to Neolithic and earlier populations. These maternal markers are consistent with long-term continuity of island communities that derived ancestry from earlier Neolithic and Bronze Age peoples, yet also absorbed wider Atlantic connections.
Because only three genomes are available, any reconstruction of population processes — migration, continuity, or gene flow — must remain tentative. Limited evidence suggests local continuity in female lines, but broader patterns (male-mediated movement, trade networks, and demographic shifts) require more samples for confirmation.
Bulleted archaeological highlights below synthesize current understanding from the site and region.