Ancient DNA from 38 individuals provides a robust, though not exhaustive, genetic portrait of early American populations. Y‑chromosome data are dominated by haplogroup Q (27 of 38 males), consistent with a founding paternal lineage widely observed across the Americas; a single C lineage appears, indicating occasional paternal diversity or older interconnectedness with Siberian lineages. Mitochondrial diversity is broad: D1 (10), C (9), D (7), B2 (4), and A2 (3) are represented, reflecting multiple maternal lineages that dispersed southward and diversified regionally.
Genetic affinities connect these individuals to both northern groups (Ancient Beringian, some Alaskan samples) and to later South American populations, suggesting early splits and subsequent isolation by distance and drift. For example, Anzick and Upward Sun River samples show northern‑shared components, while Lapa do Santo and Sumidouro individuals display mtDNA lineages common in South America. This mix indicates a complex population structure: an initial pulse of diversity followed by regional differentiation.
Caveats: despite 38 samples, geographic sampling remains uneven and temporal clustering exists; therefore conclusions about pan‑continental demographic processes remain provisional. Further sequencing across underrepresented regions will refine models of migration, admixture, and continuity with present‑day Indigenous groups.