Ancient DNA from eight individuals at Caishichang provides a compact but revealing picture of biological ancestry during the late first millennium BCE. Y-chromosome results include haplogroups Q (including Q1a) and J. Haplogroup Q and Q1a are often associated with populations of northern Eurasia and the steppe corridor, while J is more frequently observed in West Eurasian and southwest Asian contexts; the presence of both hints at male-mediated connections across east–west routes. Because only three Y-lineages are reported (Q, J, Q1a total counts include overlap), and the overall sample count is eight, any Y-based inference is preliminary.
Mitochondrial (maternal) diversity at Caishichang is notable: U (3 individuals), M3 (2), A11 (1), T (1), and D (1). Haplogroup U and T are typically found in West Eurasian and European contexts as well as western steppe groups; M3, A11, and D are characteristic of East Asian and Inner Asian populations. This mix of maternal lineages suggests admixed ancestry or sustained contact between eastern and western gene pools in the region. Archaeogenetic patterns from Xinjiang more broadly have shown such admixture across millennia, and Caishichang appears to fit that mosaic.
Important caveats: with only eight genomes, statistical power is limited. These data provide a snapshot that aligns with a picture of frontier admixture—male and female lineages reflecting both eastward and westward connections—but more samples are needed to resolve proportions, timing, and the social mechanisms behind gene flow.