The genetic signal from these five Altai-Sayan individuals is striking for its mixture of eastern and western Eurasian uniparental markers. Reported Y-DNA haplogroups include C (2 individuals), R (1), and Q (1). Maternal lineages include mtDNA C (2), U (1), D4j (1), and an entry labeled R1b in the provided mtDNA list; because R1b is typically a Y-chromosome lineage, that entry may reflect a reporting inconsistency or a rare labeling artifact and should be treated cautiously.
Interpreting this combination: Y-haplogroup C and mtDNA D4/ C variants are commonly associated with East Eurasian and Siberian ancestries, whereas Y haplogroups R and Q and mtDNA U have broader distributions that include west Eurasian and steppe-affiliated populations. Together, the uniparental data suggest admixture between local Siberian groups and groups with western/steppe connections during the mid-Holocene.
Crucially, the autosomal picture (genome-wide ancestry) is not demonstrated here in detail; uniparental markers provide directional hints but cannot alone resolve the timing, proportions, or sources of admixture. With only five genomes, and fewer definitive haplogroup counts, conclusions are preliminary: low sample size (<10) means population-level inferences are tentative and should be tested with larger, well-dated datasets.