The genetic portrait from 20 individuals labeled Mongolia_LBA_Khovsgol_6 is evocative: a strong majority of paternal lineages fall into haplogroup Q (10 of the typed Y-chromosomes), with isolated occurrences of N (1) and R (1). The maternal spectrum is dominated by East Eurasian haplogroups—mtDNA C (7), D (4), and A (2), with smaller counts of D4 (1) and U (1) among the cataloged samples. These counts reflect only the reported haplogroup designations and may not sum to the full sample set due to preservation or typing limits.
Interpretation: Y haplogroup Q is widely associated with northern Eurasian and Siberian populations, consistent with an enduring paternal ancestry in the region. The presence of N, often linked to northeastern Eurasian and Uralic-speaking groups, and R, commonly associated with broader Eurasian steppe populations, suggests episodic male-mediated gene flow from neighboring regions. The maternal dominance of C, D and A aligns with deep East Asian/Siberian maternal continuity.
Caveats and context: with 20 samples the dataset is valuable but still regionally limited; it offers a window into population structure at Arbulag sorum but may not capture the full diversity of Khovsgol communities. Where autosomal genome-wide data are available for similar contexts, they often show mixed ancestry profiles reflecting both ancient Siberian and later steppe-related components—however, direct comparisons require matched genome-wide analyses. Overall, the combined archaeogenetic signal supports a community rooted in North Asian ancestry that engaged in intermittent contact with the broader Bronze Age steppe world.