Ancient DNA from Sambaqui do Limão is extremely limited: a single individual yields mitochondrial haplogroup B2. Haplogroup B2 is a well-known Native American maternal lineage that traces back to founding populations of the Americas and persists in many present-day Indigenous groups across South and Central America. The presence of B2 at this southeast Brazilian sambaqui aligns the Limão individual with broader pan-American maternal ancestries rather than indicating a unique, isolated lineage.
However, several important caveats shape interpretation. First, the sample count is one — far below thresholds needed to describe population structure, sex-biased migration, or admixture. Second, Y-chromosome lineages were not reported for this individual, so male-line history at the site remains unknown. Third, the date window (1442–1616 CE) overlaps early post-contact centuries; without genome-wide data it is not possible to robustly detect subtle European, African, or inter-Indigenous admixture at the individual level.
Archaeology supplies cultural context while aDNA provides biological signals: together they suggest continuity of Native American maternal lines into the late-pre-contact and contact-era coastal landscape. But given the single sample, conclusions are preliminary. Future sampling from multiple burials, combined genome-wide analyses, and careful contamination controls are essential to test continuity, mobility, and interaction hypotheses.