Five ancient genomes from Arkhangai (Emeel Tolgoi, Khudgiin Am, Naimaa Tolgoi, Solbi Uul) dated between 200 BCE and 100 CE provide a tentative genetic window into a small Xiongnu-era population. Y-chromosome results include one individual assigned to haplogroup J and one to R; mitochondrial DNA is more diverse with two K lineages, and one each of B, C and I4a. These counts (Y: J=1, R=1; mtDNA: K=2, B=1, C=1, I4a=1) should be understood as raw tallies from five samples and are therefore preliminary.
The maternal mix — West Eurasian-associated haplogroup K alongside East Eurasian-associated haplogroups B and C — hints at multimodal ancestry, consistent with archaeological expectations for the Xiongnu confederation as a contact zone. Haplogroup J on the Y-chromosome can be associated with connections toward western or southwestern Eurasia in some contexts, while R is widespread across Eurasia and may reflect deeper steppe affiliations; however, haplogroup labels alone cannot specify precise ancestries without broader comparative data. Given the sample size is below ten, statistical conclusions are limited: the data suggest admixture and mobility at Arkhangai but more genomes from the region and time span are needed to robustly model population history.
Future work comparing these genomes to larger Xiongnu and neighboring Iron Age datasets will clarify whether Arkhangai represents a localized pocket of diversity or a pattern reflective of broader Xiongnu-era population processes.