The Cerro Johnny individual carries Y-chromosome haplogroup Q and mitochondrial haplogroup D — lineages commonly observed in Indigenous populations across the Americas. Haplogroup Q on the Y-chromosome is a recurring signal among Native American male lineages, while mtDNA D sits within the set of founding maternal lineages identified throughout South America. These assignments are consistent with deep ancestry stemming from Pleistocene and early Holocene peopling of the continent.
However, the genetic picture from this locus is necessarily limited. With a sample count of one, population-level inferences (such as continuity, admixture, or microevolutionary change) are highly provisional. Archaeogenetic comparisons to other Southern Cone samples suggest regional affinities but also underscore heterogeneity: coastal, steppe, and Fuegian groups show both shared ancestry and localized differentiation. Future sampling from Cerro Johnny and neighboring sites in Magallanes would be required to test hypotheses about migrations, demographic stability, and contact dynamics. For now, the DNA from Cerro Johnny provides a single, evocative data point that dovetails with archaeological interpretations but stops short of definitive population history.