The Pla de l'Horta assemblage sits in a liminal moment of Iberian history: 500–700 CE, when the Visigothic kingdom consolidated control across much of Hispania and local populations adapted to new political realities. Archaeological data from the Girona cemetery include inhumation graves with modest grave goods and burial orientations consistent with early medieval western Iberian practice. Limited evidence suggests these burials represent a mix of local Iberian traditions and influences brought by mobile groups during late antiquity.
Genetic sampling (8 individuals) is small but revealing. The presence of Y-chromosome haplogroups E and J — often associated in the Mediterranean with North African and eastern Mediterranean lineages — alongside R and I, which are common in western and northern Europe, paints a picture of admixture and mobility rather than a single invading population. Mitochondrial diversity, including U and H (typical in Europe) and rarer lineages such as C and W6a, underscores maternal heterogeneity. Archaeological stratigraphy at Pla de l'Horta indicates continuity in burial practice, suggesting that genetic influxes may have been integrated into local communities rather than replacing them.
Because the sample count is under ten, these inferences are preliminary. Archaeology indicates continuity and adaptation; genetics opens a window onto the people who lived these transitions, but broader sampling and genome-wide data are needed to clarify origins and scale of movement.