The DNA snapshot for Chile_StraitOfMagellan_Kawesqar_100BP comes from five individuals dated between 1800 and 1900 CE. Mitochondrial haplogroups are dominated by D lineages (4 samples), with one individual assigned to D1g. Maternal haplogroup D is widespread among Indigenous peoples of the Americas and its presence here aligns with regional maternal continuity. The D1g sublineage has been observed in southern South American contexts elsewhere, but with only one occurrence in this set, its local specificity is tentative.
On the paternal side, observed Y haplogroups include Q (1) and P (1). Y-haplogroup Q is a common founding lineage in the Americas; its presence is consistent with Indigenous paternal ancestry. The single P assignment is less common in published regional datasets and may reflect either a rare local lineage, incomplete resolution of the marker set, or classification uncertainty in low-coverage data. Importantly, no clear European-specific haplogroups are detected in these five samples, suggesting maternal and paternal Indigenous ancestry in this small cohort, but the sample count is below ten: all population-level inferences must be regarded as preliminary.
Taken together, the genetic signals broadly support continuity with Native South American lineages documented in Patagonia, while underscoring the need for larger, ethically sourced datasets to resolve fine-scale demographic histories.