Six ancient DNA samples from the Beagle Channel region (Almanza, Acatushún, and nearby coastal localities) provide a small but valuable window into Yamana ancestry between roughly 1550 and 1960 CE. In these specimens, paternal lineages include haplogroup Q (observed in 2 of 6 individuals), a lineage widely recognized across Native American populations. Maternal haplogroups are dominated by C1b (4 of 6) and D (2 of 6), both of which are characteristic mtDNA branches in southern South America.
Archaeological and genetic lines converge to suggest continuity of indigenous lineages in the Beagle Channel into the historic period. However, because the sample count is low (<10), these results are preliminary and should not be overgeneralized. Limited evidence suggests local persistence of core Native American maternal and paternal markers, but the small dataset cannot resolve fine-scale population structure, mobility patterns, or the timing and extent of gene flow from outside groups.
Future sampling—ideally more individuals across multiple sites and tightly dated contexts—will be necessary to test hypotheses about demographic continuity, population size changes, and the genetic impact of 19th–20th century contact events. Until then, the current genetic profile offers a cautious but evocative glimpse: a maritime people whose DNA preserves elements of a deep southern American heritage.