Ancient DNA from six individuals provides a small but meaningful glimpse into maternal diversity in Belize around 4,900 years ago. Mitochondrial haplogroups observed include A (1), A2q (1), C1c (1), C5b (1) and R (1), with a sixth sample assigned broadly within these lineages. Haplogroups A and C subclades are canonical components of Native American maternal diversity, recurring across North and South America; their presence here is consistent with regional continuity of founding lineages.
The single individual labeled as haplogroup R is notable and should be treated cautiously: R is a broad macro-haplogroup with many descendant branches, and in the Americas some sublineages can be difficult to place with low-coverage data. Given only six samples, genetic patterns are preliminary—small counts (<10) mean observations can reflect sampling bias, local kin groups, or taphonomic survival rather than population-wide frequencies.
No robust Y-chromosome pattern is reported for these individuals, so paternal lineages remain unresolved. Where genomic data permit broader comparisons, these mitochondrial signatures are broadly compatible with later Mesoamerican and Indigenous American diversity, hinting at long-term regional connections without proving direct ancestry to specific later groups. Expanded sampling and higher-coverage sequencing will be required to move from tantalizing hints to firm conclusions.