Genetic data from Sambaqui do Limão currently rests on a single ancient individual, producing a preliminary but informative snapshot. The Y‑chromosome falls into haplogroup Q and the mitochondrial lineage into haplogroup D — both lineages are common among Indigenous peoples of the Americas and are widely interpreted as descendants of the original migratory groups that crossed from Beringia into the continents.
These assignments align the Limão individual with deep Pan‑American genetic patterns rather than with later transoceanic contacts. However, a single sample cannot resolve internal population structure, local continuity, or fine‑scale kinship patterns. With only one genome, claims about demographic processes (for example, patrilineal vs. matrilineal residence, population size, or admixture events) are necessarily tentative.
Ancient DNA from coastal sambaqui sites can powerfully test archaeological models: do shell-mound builders represent long-term regional continuity, waves of newcomers, or fluid networks of kin and exchange? The Limão genome points toward continuity with broader Native American genetic diversity, but future sampling — especially multiple individuals from different mound layers and nearby sites — is required to move from suggestive alignment to robust inference.
In sum, the genetic signal is consistent with Indigenous American ancestries (Q and D) but remains preliminary pending larger sample sizes and comparative analyses.