Ten individuals sampled from the Dulan Wayan reservoir site provide the primary genetic window into this community. Maternal lineages are dominated by East Asian haplogroups: D (3 individuals), M (2), D4 (1), C4d (1), and A21 (1). These mtDNA types are common across East and Northeast Asia and are consistent with long-standing maternal continuity on the high plateau and adjacent regions.
On the paternal side, Y-chromosome diversity is modest: two individuals carry haplogroup O (a widespread East Asian lineage), one carries N (often associated with northern Eurasian and Siberian groups), and one carries R, a lineage frequent in West Eurasia and parts of Central Asia. The presence of a single R Y-haplogroup among primarily East Asian profiles suggests one of several scenarios: male-mediated gene flow from western or steppe-derived populations, an outlier within broader East Asian diversity, or historical mobility along trade and pastoral routes. Because the sample count is only 10, these patterns are preliminary; population-level inferences should be made cautiously.
Combined, the uniparental markers portray a community with predominantly East Asian maternal ancestry and a more mixed paternal signal, compatible with scenarios of regional interaction and episodic long-distance contacts during the Early Medieval period.