The genetic signal from La Arcillosa 2 is constrained but meaningful. The single sampled individual carries mitochondrial haplogroup C, one of the principal early maternal lineages found across the Americas (alongside A, B, D and X). MtDNA C in this Fuegian context may reflect deep pan‑American maternal ancestry that reached southernmost South America by the mid‑Holocene.
Critical caveats apply: sample count is one. With n=1, any population‑level inference is highly preliminary. No Y‑chromosome haplogroup is reported for this individual, so paternal lineages remain unknown. DNA preservation in sub‑Antarctic and maritime soils is often poor; the recovery of usable mtDNA here is encouraging but may bias interpretations toward better‑preserved maternal markers.
Genetic patterns observed in other southern South American ancient genomes suggest a mixture of long‑term regional continuity and episodes of gene flow, but whether La Arcillosa 2 represents local continuity, a transient coastal band, or part of a broader southern dispersal cannot be resolved without more samples. Future aDNA work targeting additional individuals, isotopic studies and genome‑wide data will be needed to place this mtDNA C lineage within migration models for the Southern Cone and to test hypotheses about coastal versus interior dispersal routes during the Holocene.