Four genomes from Kazakh Mys provide a focused, though limited, snapshot of Mid–Late Bronze Age genetic variation in eastern Kazakhstan. The sample set (n=4) includes two individuals carrying Y-chromosome haplogroup R, a lineage widely observed among Steppe pastoralists of the Bronze Age. On the maternal side, mitochondrial haplogroups are U (two individuals), J (one), and H1 (one).
Interpretation: the presence of R on the male line is compatible with Steppe-related ancestry commonly identified in contemporaneous populations (for example, Sintashta-Andronovo horizon groups), while mtDNA U signals continuity with older northern Eurasian maternal lineages. Haplogroups J and H1 point to connections with more southerly or western maternal pools, reflecting the heterogeneous maternal ancestry typical of mobile steppe communities. Because only four genomes are available, any demographic inference is preliminary: two R Y-lineages do not establish population-wide frequencies, and mitochondrial diversity in four individuals cannot capture the full maternal landscape.
Archaeogenetic context: these sequences add to a growing dataset that links archaeological patterns of mobility and metalworking with biological lineages, supporting an image of Bronze Age steppe communities as dynamic conduits of genes and culture. Future sampling from Kazakh Mys and neighboring sites is essential to test hypotheses about sex-biased migration, gene flow, and continuity into later periods.