Five ancient individuals from Mayahak Cab Pek and Saki Tzul yielded mitochondrial DNA haplogroups dominated by haplogroup C subtypes (C5b ×2, C1c ×1), plus D (×1) and A (×1). These mtDNA lineages fall within the set of founding pan-American maternal clades (A, B, C, D, and X), indicating maternal continuity with broader Native American ancestries that trace deep roots into Beringian and northern Asian source populations.
No consistent Y-DNA signal is reported for this small sample, so paternal lineage patterns remain unresolved. Because the sample count is low (n=5), any inferred demographic patterns must be treated as preliminary: observed frequencies can shift substantially with a few additional genomes. Nevertheless, the concentration of C subclades (notably C5b and C1c) hints at local maternal line continuity or founder effects in coastal Belize during the mid-Holocene.
Genetic data synchronizes with archaeology to suggest these individuals were part of widespread maternal lineages that dispersed throughout the Americas long before 4600 years ago. Future targeted sequencing—more individuals, higher coverage, and nuclear DNA—will be crucial to detect admixture, kinship within burials, and fine-scale population structure across the Belizean Lowlands.