The Russia_Afanasievo dataset of 30 genome-wide samples offers a substantial window into the genetic makeup of early Bronze Age communities in southern Siberia. Y-chromosome data are dominated by haplogroup R (12 individuals) with a smaller presence of Q (3 individuals). This predominance of R-lineages aligns with a broader pattern seen in many western steppe pastoralist groups and supports the interpretation that Afanasievo populations carried western steppe male-line ancestry into the Altai region.
Mitochondrial DNA is likewise informative: U-lineages are most common (15 individuals), followed by T (6), J (5), H (2) and K (1). High frequency of mtDNA U—often associated with European hunter-gatherer and early Neolithic lineages—may reflect either retention of maternal lineages within migrating steppe populations or admixture with local forager groups; disentangling these scenarios requires high-resolution haplogroup subclade analysis and autosomal ancestry modeling. Genome-wide affinities tend to cluster Afanasievo individuals closer to Yamnaya-related steppe ancestry than to contemporaneous East Siberian groups, though some samples show evidence of incremental admixture with local Siberian ancestry over time.
Because this dataset is moderate in size, conclusions about heterogeneity, sex-biased admixture, and fine-scale demographic events are promising but not definitive. Further sampling—especially from underrepresented sites—will refine models of migration routes, social structure, and the pace of local interaction.