The genetic dataset from Belize_4000BP currently comprises two individuals recovered from Mayahak Cab Pek dated between 2204 and 1778 BCE. Both yielded mitochondrial DNA: one carried haplogroup C and the other haplogroup A — two of the principal maternal lineages widespread across ancient and modern Native American populations. These mtDNA assignments align with established models of early peopling where haplogroups A, B, C, D, and X appear repeatedly across the Americas.
No robust common Y-DNA haplogroup is reported for this sample set, so paternal-line inferences are not yet possible. Given the very small sample count (n = 2), population-level conclusions must be treated as preliminary: these two maternal lineages show that deep Native American maternal ancestry was present on the Belizean coast by ~4,000 years ago, but they do not resolve questions of migration directionality, local continuity, or genetic structure within Mesoamerica.
Archaeology and ancient DNA together suggest continuity of founding maternal lineages through the mid-Holocene in the region, while the absence of Y-DNA and autosomal context cautions against overinterpretation. Expanded sampling and genome-wide data would be needed to test hypotheses about demographic shifts, admixture, and kinship patterns.