Ancient DNA from two individuals excavated at Jabuticabeira II yields a clear maternal signal: both samples carry mitochondrial haplogroup C1c. Haplogroup C1c is one of several founding Native American maternal lineages distributed across the Americas, and its presence at a late Sambaqui site is consistent with regional continuity of Indigenous maternal lineages along the Atlantic coast. However, no Y-chromosome haplogroup information is reported for these individuals, so paternal lineage patterns are currently unresolved.
Because the sample count is only two, genetic inferences must remain cautious. Two concordant mtDNA results can indicate a localized maternal continuity or kin clustering within a burial context, but they are insufficient to demonstrate population-wide patterns. Archaeogeneticists therefore treat these findings as preliminary: they are valuable as direct time-anchored data points that can be compared to larger datasets as more samples become available.
When integrated with archaeological evidence, the mtDNA results help anchor hypotheses about mobility, kinship, and community structure. For example, repeated maternal haplogroups in a single mound might reflect matrilocal residence or family-based burial practices, but alternative explanations—sample bias, small burial population, or post-depositional mixing—cannot be excluded. Future sampling, isotopic mobility analyses, and comparison to inland and later coastal populations will be essential to move from tentative observation to robust population history.