Two ancient genomes from Conchalí provide a slender but illuminating genetic thread. Both male individuals carry Y‑DNA haplogroup Q, a lineage broadly associated with Indigenous populations across the Americas and interpreted as a descendant of early founding paternal lineages. The mitochondrial results show haplogroups B and D—both recognized as major founding maternal lineages in the Americas. Together, these results align the Conchalí individuals with pan‑American ancestral components identified in other Andean and southern cone ancient samples.
Important caveats shape interpretation. The sample count is only two individuals; with n < 10, conclusions about population structure, demographic continuity, or admixture are highly preliminary. These two genomes can suggest affinities—shared ancestry with other precontact South American groups—but they cannot on their own resolve finer-scale questions such as population replacement, sex‑biased migration, or the timing of local gene flow.
Genetics and archaeology together offer a richer picture: archaeological associations anchor these genetic signals in place and time (Conchalí, c. 1040–1410 CE), while future targeted sampling across nearby sites and additional isotopic or proteomic analyses could reveal mobility patterns, kinship, and diet. For now, the genetic data confirm continuity with broader Native American founding lineages and encourage expanded sampling.