Across windswept peatlands and riverine shores of northwest Russia, the people grouped here as Russia_Mesolithic_Veretye lived between the early and middle Holocene. Radiocarbon dates for the eleven studied individuals span roughly 9858 to 5482 BCE and come from three archaeological loci: Karavaikha (Vologda Oblast, Karavaikha Village), Pogostishche‑1 (Vologda Oblast), and Peschanitsa (Arkhangelsk Oblast).
Archaeological data indicates occupation of lakeshore and riverbank settings where fish, waterfowl, and seasonally available plants shaped subsistence. The material culture linked to these sites aligns with the broader Veretye cultural horizon — a patchwork of local Mesolithic traditions rather than a single, uniform archaeological culture. Limited evidence suggests long‑term continuity in funerary practices at spots like Karavaikha, where layered burials and isolated interments preserve a sequence of human presence.
Genetically, these individuals appear to carry northern hunter‑gatherer signatures consistent with Eastern Hunter‑Gatherer (EHG) and other northern Eurasian ancestries. This genetic portrait dovetails with the archaeological picture: mobile foragers who persisted in high‑latitude landscapes as post‑glacial environments stabilized. Because the sample set is modest and geographically concentrated, interpretations about wider population movements remain cautious and provisional.