Seven genetic samples from Kuokesuxi provide a first molecular glimpse into the population biology of this Early Iron Age community. The mitochondrial DNA assemblage includes haplogroups T (2 individuals), C (1), D (1), J (1), and U (1). This mix contains lineages typical of both West Eurasian (T, J, U) and East Eurasian (C, D) maternal ancestries, suggesting maternal genetic inputs from multiple directions.
No dominant Y‑DNA haplogroup is reported in the available dataset, either because Y-chromosome results were not preserved, not recovered, or were too heterogeneous to point to a single male lineage. The presence of both West and East Eurasian mtDNA markers aligns with models of Xinjiang as a genetic contact zone during the 1st millennium BCE, where steppe pastoralists, western agro-pastoral groups, and eastern communities met and exchanged genes.
Crucially, with only seven genomes, conclusions are tentative. Small sample sizes can easily over- or under-represent lineages present in the broader community. Therefore, while the mtDNA mix at Kuokesuxi is evocative of admixture and connectivity, it must be treated as preliminary evidence. Future broader sampling and genome-wide analyses will be necessary to quantify ancestry proportions, sex-biased mobility, and relationships to contemporaneous populations across the Tarim, Ili, and steppe regions.