The Austria_N_LBK assemblage represents the Linear Pottery Culture (LBK) settling the fertile floodplains of Lower Austria between c. 5500 and 4500 BCE. Archaeological data indicates longhouses, dentate-decorated pottery, and linear-impressed ceramics across sites such as Asparn-Schletz and Brunn Wolfholz. These material markers trace a migration and cultural spread that archaeologists link to early farming groups that moved north and west from southeastern Europe.
Genetic data from 89 individuals strengthens this picture: autosomal profiles are broadly consistent with Anatolian Neolithic-derived farmer ancestry, the genetic signature associated with the first widespread farming communities in Europe. At the same time, variable admixture from local Mesolithic hunter-gatherers is evident in some individuals, suggesting interaction and biological exchange at settlement frontiers. The convergence of material culture and DNA presents a cinematic landscape: new villages springing up along river valleys, wooden longhouses aligned like ships, and populations with a largely Anatolian-farmer genetic core adapting to Central European woodlands.
Limited evidence suggests regional diversity in timing and intensity of contact with indigenous groups, and the archaeological record preserves episodes of both coexistence and conflict. While the LBK package defines a cultural horizon, local trajectories in Austria show a tapestry of interaction rather than a simple replacement.