Ancient DNA from six individuals associated with Kazakhstan_Central_Saka (dated 777–416 BCE) offers a preliminary window into the biological ancestry of these Iron Age steppe communities. Four of the six male-associated samples carry Y-chromosome haplogroup R (unspecified sublineages in the available data), a lineage commonly found across many earlier and contemporary steppe pastoralist groups. This concentration of R suggests a degree of male-line continuity with broader steppe populations, but without subclade resolution the geographic specificity of that continuity remains uncertain.
Mitochondrial diversity among the six samples is notable: two U haplogroups, and one each of A, H, F, and C4d. U and H are typically associated with West Eurasian maternal ancestries, while A and C4d are more common in East Eurasian lineages; F has broad Eurasian distribution. Together, these mitochondrial lineages point to mixed maternal ancestry within the sampled group, consistent with archaeological indications of long-distance connections across the steppe.
Crucially, the sample count is small (<10), so any population-level inference is tentative. The genetic signal hints at a community shaped by steppe male-line continuity and diverse female-line inputs—plausibly reflecting mobility, exchange marriages, or incorporation of groups along trade routes—but larger, more geographically and temporally dense sampling is needed to test these patterns robustly.