Perched on a limestone ridge near modern Caltanissetta, the settlement of Polizzello unfolds like a stratified storybook of Iron Age Sicily. Archaeological layers record occupation and funerary activity between the 9th and 6th centuries BCE (c. 850–541 BCE). Excavations have revealed hut foundations, terraced enclosures, and necropoleis containing richly furnished graves with local ceramics and imported Mediterranean wares. These material traces point to a community rooted in earlier Bronze Age traditions but increasingly tied into wider maritime networks.
Archaeological data indicates cultural exchange with both Phoenician and Greek seafarers during the 8th–6th centuries BCE: imported amphorae and styles appear alongside local pottery traditions, producing hybrid material culture. The 19 ancient individuals sampled from Polizzello provide a genetic dimension to this picture. Their uniparental markers suggest continuity of local maternal lineages combined with paternal lineages that are also present elsewhere in the central Mediterranean. Limited evidence suggests this was not simply replacement by newcomers but rather a complex process of contact, exchange, and selective influx.
Uncertainties remain: pottery and objects document contact, but uniparental DNA offers only part of the ancestry story. Genome-wide analyses, where available, would better resolve timing and directionality of gene flow. For now, Polizzello stands as a place where local endurance met Mediterranean movement.