The samples in this dataset date to the year 2000 CE and were collected in Sukhum (Sukhumi), the principal coastal city of Abkhazia. Archaeological surveys and excavations in the wider Abkhazian littoral and interior document a multilayered human presence stretching from Antiquity into the medieval and modern periods. In museum terms, these modern samples are best read as snapshots of living populations — people whose identities are shaped by centuries of trade, migration, empire, and local continuity.
Archaeological data indicates long-term settlement of the Black Sea shore near Sukhum; classical sources and surface finds attest to activity in the region, but continuity between ancient and modern communities is complex and mediated by population movements, political change, and cultural exchange. Limited archaeological context for modern urban samples means that linking an individual genome directly to a specific archaeological culture is rarely possible without robust stratigraphic and material association.
For the scientific reader: these 10 modern samples are valuable for anchoring genetic variation to a modern place-name and time, but they are not a replacement for well-contextualized ancient DNA from dated burials. They tell us about contemporary genetic diversity in Sukhum, not about discrete ancient population turnovers. Where possible, comparisons to regional archaeological sequences and ancient DNA from the Caucasus should be used to interpret patterns cautiously.