Genome-wide and uniparental data from 10 individuals provide a first genetic portrait of the Mongolia_LBA_CenterWest_4 grouping. Y-chromosome haplogroup Q was the most frequent (4/10), consistent with deep-rooted East Siberian/Inner Asian male lineages common on the steppe. Single occurrences of C and N likely reflect additional northern or northeastern connections: haplogroup C is often observed among Mongolic and Altaic-associated groups, while N can indicate more northerly Siberian ancestry. Maternal lineages are dominated by East Eurasian mtDNA: A (3), C (2), and D (2), which are widespread across northern Asia and mirror the regional archaeological setting.
Two maternal haplotypes, K and U, point to sporadic western Eurasian maternal inputs; these could reflect long-distance connections across the steppe or residual ancestry from earlier millennia. Archaeological and genetic concordance suggests a largely local East Eurasian population with some admixture events, yet the sample count is small (n=10). Consequently, population-level inferences should be treated as preliminary. Future denser sampling and genome-wide analyses (including autosomal ancestry components and isotope data) will clarify the timing and scale of gene flow and social patterns such as patrilocality or kinship-based burial clustering.