The genetic snapshot from Butakty-1 comprises three genomes—a very small dataset but one that already illustrates complexity. Y-chromosome haplogroup J appears in two individuals (2/3 males), a lineage widely distributed today in West Asia, the Caucasus, and parts of the Near East. In medieval Central Asia, J-lineages can reflect gene flow associated with trade, migration, or the movement of male-mediated social networks during the early Islamic centuries; however, haplogroup assignment alone does not indicate precise geographic origin.
Mitochondrial DNA shows three different maternal lineages: G and A+ (both commonly linked to East Asian/Siberian maternal ancestries) and J1c (a West Eurasian maternal lineage). This mix of East and West Eurasian maternal markers points to a heterogeneous maternal pool at Butakty-1 and suggests local or regional continuity of East Eurasian lineages even as some male lineages show West Eurasian affinities. Such a pattern—West-leaning paternal haplogroups paired with mixed or East-leaning maternal haplogroups—can reflect male-biased migration or long-distance patrilocal connections along trade routes.
Crucially, with only three samples the statistical power is low. Population-scale claims would be premature. Future sampling (larger n, geographically broader, and combined with isotopic and archaeological context) is required to test hypotheses about demographic processes, sex-biased admixture, and the role of Silk Road connectivity during the Karakhanid period.