The genetic portrait from Ekven is compact but evocative. Among five sampled individuals, four males carry Y-chromosome haplogroup Q and one carries haplogroup C. On the maternal side, three individuals carry mtDNA A, one carries D, and one carries A2a. These lineages are broadly associated with eastern Siberian and Beringian populations: haplogroup Q is widespread in northern Eurasia and is a primary lineage in many Native American populations, while mtDNA A and D are common in East Asian and Native American contexts. Haplogroup C, present in a single sample, also has deep roots across northern Asia.
Archaeogenetic interpretation must proceed cautiously: a sample size of five is small, and patterns may not capture full regional diversity. Nonetheless, the clustering of Q and A/D lineages supports archaeological impressions of continuity with Arctic maritime groups and with populations that took part in trans-Beringian exchanges. These genetic markers do not by themselves indicate direct continuity to any single modern group but rather place Ekven within a spectrum of Siberian-Arctic ancestries that contributed to the peopling of the circumpolar north and, ultimately, to populations across Beringia.
Future genome-wide analyses and larger sample sets will be essential to resolve admixture, population structure, and temporal change at Ekven.