Ancient DNA from eight individuals recovered at Chilpek and Ken‑Su provides a tantalizing, if preliminary, genetic window into the Issyk‑Kul Saka-associated population. The sample set (n = 8) is small — below the threshold where broad population-level claims are secure — so interpretations must be cautious. Still, the observed haplogroups point to a mosaic ancestry.
Y‑chromosome results show multiple paternal lineages: two individuals carry haplogroup J, and one carries R. Haplogroup J is often linked to western and southwestern Eurasian distributions, while R is widespread across Eurasia and common in steppe contexts. On the maternal side, mitochondrial haplogroups include U (two individuals), H1, U1a, F, and A16. Haplogroups U and H variants are frequently associated with West Eurasian maternal ancestries; F and A16 are more typical of East and Central Asian maternal lineages.
Taken together, the genetic signature suggests admixture between western Eurasian and eastern/Central Asian ancestries — a pattern well aligned with archaeological expectations for Saka-era populations who inhabited crossroads of the steppe. Yet, the low sample count, broad temporal span (c. 751 BCE–884 CE), and potential kinship among buried individuals mean that these genetic results should be treated as provisional. Expanded sampling, higher-resolution autosomal analysis, and direct radiocarbon dating of each genome will be essential to move from intriguing glimpses to robust population history.