Thirteen individuals from Bustan provide a first genetic window into this Bronze Age community. Y-chromosome lineages show a plurality of J haplogroups (4/13), with single instances of F, G, L and R. Mitochondrial haplogroups include HV (2), T1 (1), H2 (1), H (1) and R0 (1), reflecting predominantly West Eurasian maternal lineages. These uniparental markers suggest a complex tapestry of ancestry: J and R are often associated with Near Eastern and Eurasian steppe contexts, G is frequently linked to the Caucasus, while L can indicate south Asian connections. F is widespread in parts of Asia and may signal deeper regional diversity.
Interpreting uniparental markers requires caution: they capture only single lineages per individual and can overemphasize particular ancestries. With 13 samples, patterns are emerging but remain preliminary—this is a modest, though meaningful, sample size for Bronze Age Central Asia. Archaeogenomic analyses that combine autosomal data with these uniparental results would be essential to quantify admixture proportions and directions of gene flow. Tentatively, the genetic picture at Bustan aligns with archaeological signals of both local continuity and incoming influences from southern and western neighbors, consistent with a frontier community shaped by mobility and exchange across Bronze Age Central Asia.