This dataset comprises 174 modern individuals sampled in 2000 from locations including Tuscany; Trapani, Sicily; Belvedere (Cosenza); Siracusa; Naples; Salerno; and Crispiano. Archaeological layers beneath these places tell a cinematic story: Paleolithic hunter-gatherer camps gave way to Neolithic farmers who reshaped the land; Bronze Age movements introduced new material cultures across the peninsula; Iron Age societies such as the Etruscans and the Greek city-states of Magna Graecia transformed southern urban landscapes; and the Roman Empire unified diverse peoples under shared institutions. Archaeological evidence—settlements, ceramic typologies, burial practices, and urban stratigraphy—maps these major demographic pulses.
Genetically, modern Italians inherit a palimpsest of those events. The living population preserves signals of ancient farmers and hunters, later Bronze Age mobility, and a succession of historic contacts (Greek colonization, Roman-era movement, medieval migrations across the Mediterranean and Europe). Because these are modern samples, they represent the end result of many centuries of admixture, drift, and local continuity. Archaeological data indicates repeated population turnover and cultural layering at sites such as Siracusa (Sicily) and urban centers in Tuscany; genetics captures the blended echoes of those processes.