The genetic dataset for Mongolia_LBA_CenterWest_5 comprises three individuals—an extremely small sample that requires conservative interpretation. Mitochondrial haplogroups are dominated by East Asian lineages (D in two individuals, C in one), while the single male Y-chromosome is assigned to haplogroup O. These lineages are common across modern and ancient East Asian and Siberian populations, and their presence here suggests maternal continuity with regional East Asian maternal gene pools during the Late Bronze Age.
Notably, the absence of clearly West Eurasian paternal or maternal markers among these three samples contrasts with contemporaneous mixed ancestries documented in other steppe pockets; however, with n = 3 this could reflect sampling bias. Archaeogenetic patterns in Mongolia are complex: other Late Bronze Age and Iron Age contexts show varying degrees of east–west admixture. For this Center West cluster, the preliminary signal points toward predominant East Asian ancestry in both maternal and paternal lines, but further sampling is required to test hypotheses about population continuity, migration, or localized admixture dynamics.