Ancient DNA from three individuals attributed to the Peru_Lauricocha_8600BP grouping provides a rare genetic window into early Andean populations. Two male-associated Y-chromosome profiles belong to haplogroup Q, a lineage widely observed in both ancient and modern Native American populations. Mitochondrial DNA from the three individuals includes haplogroups A (found in two samples) and B (one sample), both of which are among the recognized founding maternal lineages of the Americas.
These genetic markers align Lauricocha individuals with broader continental patterns: haplogroup Q on the paternal side and mtDNA A/B on the maternal side are common across ancient North and South American datasets. This concordance suggests that the Lauricocha occupants carried genetic lineages that contributed to the ancestry of later Andean and lowland Native American groups.
However, sample count is small (n=3). With fewer than ten genomes, any population-level inference is provisional. Low sample size limits assessments of genetic diversity, population structure, and admixture events. Coverage, preservation and the possibility that sampled individuals represent related people or a single social unit further restrict interpretation.
Future work—additional sampling, higher-coverage genomes and comparative analysis with other early Andean and coastal sites—will be necessary to test hypotheses about continuity, migration corridors into the highlands, and the degree to which Lauricocha represents a local lineage versus part of a wider network.