The recovered genetic information from this individual is sparse but evocative. Mitochondrial DNA places the person in haplogroup B—an East Asian maternal lineage that, in later millennia, is present across East Asia and also in populations of the Americas. This single mtDNA assignment provides a maternal snapshot rather than a full population portrait. No Y‑chromosome data are reported for this specimen, and autosomal coverage is limited, so assessments of ancestry, admixture or direct continuity with later groups are highly provisional.
Because sample count = 1, statistical inference is essentially impossible: the mtDNA B signal could represent a locally common maternal line, a transient lineage, or an individual of mixed ancestry. Nevertheless, when combined with other ancient genomes from Northeast Asia, such mitochondrial data help map the deep-time presence of lineages that later appear across wider regions. Archaeogenetics here primarily serves as a directional indicator—suggesting maternal connections across East Asia—rather than definitive proof of population movements. Future samples from the Amur and adjacent regions, especially with robust autosomal data, will be required to test hypotheses of continuity, migration, and the role of the Amur as a corridor linking interior Siberia, the Russian Far East and northeastern China.