Ancient DNA from human remains at Geoksyur offers a direct line to ancestry. Among reported paternal lineages, haplogroup J appears most frequently (7 occurrences), with single occurrences of R and Q. On the maternal side, mtDNA lineages include J (5), HV (4), U7a (2), T (2), and H (2). These markers collectively point toward a strong Near Eastern component: haplogroup J on both Y and mtDNA, and HV and U7a maternally, are broadly associated with populations of the Near East and adjacent regions.
The presence of Q and R, each in low frequency, suggests occasional gene flow from more northerly or steppe-associated groups or from Central Asian pockets carrying those lineages. Because reported Y-chromosome counts here total fewer than ten individuals, conclusions about paternal structure must be treated as preliminary: limited paternal sampling can exaggerate or understate particular lineages' prevalence. Likewise, while the maternal dataset is larger, it still reflects a finite sample from a single community and time span.
Taken together, the genetic signal supports archaeological interpretations of Geoksyur as a place of intersection: principally Near Eastern ancestry with minor contributions from other regional gene pools. Future sampling across neighboring sites and time slices will be essential to test whether this profile reflects local continuity, episodic migration, or broader population shifts during the Chalcolithic transition.