Ancient DNA from the three Kamchatka individuals shows a strikingly consistent maternal signal: all three samples belong to mitochondrial haplogroup G1b. This lineage is characteristic of northeastern Eurasia and has been observed in modern and ancient populations across Siberia and adjacent Pacific regions. On the paternal side, two of the three male individuals carry Y-chromosome haplogroup C, a widely distributed lineage in northern and eastern Eurasia and among many coastal and inland Siberian groups.
These genetic markers, taken together, suggest strong East Eurasian affinities in both maternal and paternal lines. However, the sample count is extremely small (n=3); therefore, any population-level inference is preliminary. The uniformity of mtDNA G1b across all three individuals could reflect maternal continuity, a closely related burial group, or simple sampling bias. Likewise, the presence of haplogroup C in two samples hints at regional paternal continuity but cannot characterize population structure or admixture dynamics on its own.
Archaeogenetic interpretation must also consider post-depositional factors, potential kinship among the sampled individuals, and the broader genomic landscape of Kamchatka and neighboring Siberia. Future dense sampling and genome-wide data will be needed to test hypotheses about continuity with later Itelmen groups and wider Northeast Asian migrations.