The genetic evidence from Laguna Chica is currently limited to a single ancient mitochondrial genome assigned to haplogroup D. Haplogroup D is one of the founding maternal lineages commonly observed across the Americas, and its presence at Laguna Chica aligns the maternal ancestry of this individual with broad Native American mitochondrial variation. This connection suggests maternal continuity with pan-American founder lineages that spread during the late Pleistocene and Holocene.
However, with only one sample (n=1), population-level inferences are highly provisional. We cannot assess paternal lineages (no Y-DNA reported), intra-site diversity, or the presence of additional mtDNA clades without more samples. Genetic affinities to neighboring regions (e.g., Andean, Southern Cone, or other Pampas groups) remain to be tested through genome-wide data and comparative datasets. Ancient DNA here functions as a cinematic, single-frame glimpse: it confirms that an individual at Laguna Chica carried a maternal lineage widespread in the Americas, but it cannot resolve population structure, migration dynamics, or social kinship patterns on its own.
Future sampling and genome-wide analyses could reveal whether Laguna Chica fits local continuity models, reflects admixture events, or documents microregional diversity across the Pampas.