Ancient DNA analysis of eight individuals from Huatuyan Cave produced maternally inherited mitochondrial haplogroups indicative of East and Southeast Asian affinities. Observed mtDNA lineages include haplogroup D (2 individuals), F (1), N (1), M (1) and R (1). These haplogroups are common across southern China, mainland Southeast Asia, and among many modern Sino-Tibetan and Austroasiatic-speaking populations.
No consistent Y-DNA signal is reported for this dataset, and limited male-specific markers or preservation may have prevented paternal lineage characterization. Because the total sampled individuals number only eight, and mtDNA represents only maternal ancestry, conclusions about the broader population must remain tentative. Small sample sizes can overrepresent particular lineages and obscure diversity.
Nonetheless, the mitochondrial profile aligns with archaeological expectations for Guangxi: continuity of regional maternal lineages through the late first millennium into the historic era, and genetic connections that mirror known cultural networks linking southern China and Southeast Asia. Future sampling, genome-wide data, and direct radiocarbon dating of individuals will be essential to test hypotheses about migration, admixture, and social structure.