Three individuals from Dongmaili yielded mitochondrial haplogroups D (1), F (1), and T2b (1). Mitochondrial haplogroup D is widespread across East Asia and Siberia and often reflects long-standing East Asian maternal ancestry. Haplogroup F is also common in East and Southeast Asia, while T2b is typically associated with West Eurasian maternal lineages and appears in Neolithic and later contexts across Europe and western Asia. The coexistence of these mtDNA types at Dongmaili indicates maternal diversity consistent with a frontier zone where eastern and western maternal lineages met.
No common Y-DNA haplogroups were reported for these three samples; therefore, paternal lineages remain unknown for Dongmaili. Likewise, autosomal ancestry profiles were not provided here, so fine-scale admixture estimates cannot be stated. Given the sample count is just three (<10), any inference about population structure, migration, or admixture must be treated as preliminary. Small-N datasets can reveal tantalizing patterns—such as the presence of a West Eurasian maternal lineage (T2b)—but robust population histories require larger, geographically comparative panels and autosomal data.
Future sampling and genome-wide analyses could test whether Dongmaili reflects temporary mobility of individuals, persistent mixed communities, or episodic gene flow along corridors linking the Eurasian steppe and the Chinese interior.