The Middle Bronze Age horizon at Sidon (c. 1950–1600 BCE) unfolds in layers of stone, ash and traded pottery, marking a period of urban consolidation along the Levantine coast. Archaeological data indicates expanded sedentarism, fortified settlements, and intensified maritime exchange with Cyprus, Anatolia and Egypt. At the College Site in Sidon, burial contexts and associated material culture place these five individuals within that dynamic coastal network.
Genetically, the small sample set offers a tentative window into origins: two male individuals carry Y-chromosome haplogroup J, a lineage widespread in the Near East and often linked to long-standing Levantine populations. Maternal lineages are diverse — R, HV, K, N and H — reflecting a tapestry of maternal ancestry rather than a single founder group. Limited evidence suggests continuity with earlier Levantine populations but also hints at connections mediated by trade and mobility.
Because only five genomes are available, conclusions about population movements, founder events or demographic shifts remain provisional. Archaeological context — settlement patterns, crafts, and imported goods — provides essential cultural scaffolding for interpreting these genetic signals, but larger datasets are required to resolve finer patterns of migration or admixture.